Curing Epilepsy with Robots. A conversation with LHSC’s Sandrine deRibaupierre

March 15, 2023
Dr. Sandrine de Ribaupierre
The Robot Industry Podcast
Curing Epilepsy with Robots. A conversation with LHSC’s Sandrine deRibaupierre
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The human brain is critical to a child’s development. Within a few years of life, it enables us to sit, walk, talk and eventually make decisions. But for those suffering from neurological conditions, such as epilepsy, that journey can be complicated.

I am Dr. Sandrine deRibaupierre, paediatric neurosurgeon at Children’s Hospital in London, Ontario, Canada, and today I’ll be talking about The ROSA Robotic Arm, a life-changing technology that allows teams at LHSC’s Children’s Hospital to perform curative neurosurgeries on children with drug-resistant epilepsy.

The ROSA allows us to provide leading-edge care while saving staff time and resources, reducing wait and recovery times, and ultimately enhancing the quality of life for children with epilepsy.

My introduction for Dr. deRibaupierre:

Dr. Sandrine de Ribaupierre earned her MD at the University of Geneva in Switzerland. After a Neuro surgery residency in Lausanne, Switzerland, she completed an epilepsy fellowship in the Fondation Rothschild in Paris, then a pediatric neurosurgery fellowship in the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.

Dr. deRibaupierre is currently working as a pediatric neurosurgeon at Children’s Hospital at London Health Sciences Centre, in London, Ontario, with some involvement in adult trauma and skull base cases. 

In April 2022, she was appointed as Research Chair of Paediatric Neurosurgery and Neuroscience at Children’s Hospital at LHSC. In this role, she leads a multidisciplinary team to improve neurosurgery outcomes by furthering our understanding of brain development and how it is impacted by complex diagnoses like epilepsy, hydrocephalus, tumours and traumatic brain injury. The team also leverages augmented and virtual reality tools to improve surgical planning and the patient experience. Dr. deRibaupierre is also a Professor at the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry at Western University in London, where her main research areas are medical education, using virtual and augmented reality as an educational tool, with a special interest in neuro anatomy, and neuro imaging investigating both the normal brain development and how it is affected by some neurological pathologies.

Here are my questions for Sandrine:

Q. As a dad to a physician I understand that the road to your practice and research is rarely a straight one. Can you tell us about your path to this very niche practice and application of your surgical skills?

Q. Tell us about the impact the ROSA has had on patients and the neurosurgical team at LHSC’s Children’s Hospital?

Q. Is the technology developing rapidly and what work are you doing to advance children’s neurosurgeries through these technologies?

Q. So how do you stay ahead of the training and practicing skills when you’re just trying to get OR time and keep up with caring for your patients?

Q. You are focused on using a device called the ROSA One Brain Robotic Arm, allowing you to perform a procedure that pinpoints the location of epileptic seizures in patients for subsequent brain surgery.
Can you tell us more about the ROSA and how the robot assists you in this procedure?

Q. What does the ROSA mean for patients and families in your region? What is the reaction you would have from patients or their parents when they find out there will be a robot involved in their surgery?

Q. I understand that the ROSA robot came to you in March 2022. How much have you had the opportunity in the last year to work with the technology? What is notable about it? Does it improve speed or accuracy? Does it allow you to increase the number of surgeries can you do in a year?

Q. So I’m pretty sure that as in any surgery you have a team around you. How does a team in robotic surgery differ from a typical OR team?

Q. Where does the surgeon stop and the robot begin or are you one in the same in that OR?

Q. What does the future look like for robotics at London Health Sciences Centre? Through either your clinical practice or research, what things do you see yourself working on?

Q. When you are not performing surgeries or working on your clinical research what do you like to do in your free time? That is if you have any.

Thanks to the awesome staff at London Health Sciences Center of London, Ontario including Elizabeth Summers, Steve Robinson, Dr. deRibaupierre, Allie Vandershot, Lauren McAlea-Phillips from Children's Health Foundation CHF and Tammy Quigley.

As always, enjoy the podcast. Thanks for subscribing, thanks for listening.

If you are interested to make a donation, to Child Health, it is just one click away

https://childhealth.ca/donation/

Regards,

Jim

Jim Beretta
Customer Attraction Industrial Marketing & The Robot Industry Podcast

If you would like to get involved with The Robot Industry Podcast, would like to become a guest or nominate someone, you can find me, Jim Beretta on LinkedIn.

Our sponsor for this podcast edition is Children's Health Foundation.

Established in 1922, Children’s Health Foundation (CHF) inspires caring people to donate to support health care excellence at Children’s Hospital, TVCC (Formerly, Thames Valley Children’s Centre) and Children’s Health Research Institute. Children’s Health Foundation help strengthen and transform the health care experience by funding equipment, programs, and research that ensure better childhoods for kids with life-threatening or life-limiting diagnoses.  

Thanks to the generosity of Children’s Health Foundation donors, Children’s Hospital was able to purchase the ROSA One-Brain Robotic arm and begin performing leading-edge surgeries that CURE children of their epilepsy.  

Purchasing the ROSA was funded 100 percent by donors. Having the ROSA is only possible because of community-minded leaders, like the podcast listeners today.  

You can start learning about leading-edge care for our kids by joining us online at childhealth.ca or on socials @chfhope.  

Children’s Health Foundation is honoured to gather our community together in support of life-changing technology and medical innovations like the ROSA. We are so grateful to support the best possible care for our children, youth and their families.

Show Notes:

ROSA One Brain Robotic Arm

Helps to facilitate brain surgery in kids with drug-resistant epilepsy 

"Game-Changing" Robotic Arm, ROSA, Arrives for Purple Day | Children's Health Foundation (childhealth.ca)

A video of the ROSA in action: https://youtu.be/P6XWBn2QlXQ

Keywords and terms for this podcast: LHSC, London Ontario, Children's Health Foundation.

If you would like to get in touch with Dr. Sandrine de Ribaupierre you can touch base with LHSC Media If  media@lhsc.on.ca

Our Team | LHSC

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