LinkedInXFacebook
Subscribe
Orthopedics This Week
  • My Feed
  • |Posts
  • |Events
  • |MSK Innovations
  • |Power Rankings
  • |Masterclasses
  • |Technology Awards
  • Press Releases
  • |Advertising
  • |Job Board
  • Spine
  • ◆Joints
  • ◆Upper Extremities
  • ◆Foot & Ankle
  • ◆Sports Medicine
  • ◆Pain Mgmt
  • ◆Trauma
  • ◆Biologics
  • ◆Technology
  • ◆People
  • ◆Company News
  • ◆Legal & Regulatory
Home/Large Joints and Extremities/FundamentalVR Expands With @HomeVR
Large Joints and Extremities

FundamentalVR Expands With @HomeVR

May 11, 2020 2 min read Premium comments

Advertisement

FundamentalVR Expands With @HomeVR
Source: FundamentalVR
Secondary#fundamentalvr#virtualrealityorthopedics

London, UK-based FundamentalVR has added to its educational platform—Fundamental Surgery—with @HomeVR, a tool that will allow for accredited educational simulations to be used on standalone VR headsets such as Oculus Quest and HTC Vive Focus Plus.

According to the company, “The hardware-agnostic software solution can mimic the physical cues of surgical actions, medical tools, and tissue variations. Studies have shown that this aids learning in helping trainees develop the muscle memory essential for surgical skills. The platform utilizes off-the-shelf hardware (PCs/laptops, VR headset and haptic arms), making it less than a tenth of the cost of current learning practices.”

According to CEO Richard Vincent, FundamentalVR decided to launch @HomeVR now due to user feedback during the COVID crisis. “Considering the current pandemic, we are hearing from surgeons, supervisors and trainees that our new @HomeVR modality is needed now more than ever. We have been working on @HomeVR for many months and decided to release the capability now to meet the needs of our customers and medical professionals worldwide who are now looking for new ways to teach and train.”

“With @HomeVR, surgeons, residents and trainees have the ability to maintain, practice and learn skills from anywhere, including in their homes, using standalone VR headsets. Additionally, thanks to our single user login, supervisors and users alike can access insights around capabilities remotely and monitor how users are progressing. We’ve been pleased with the positive feedback we’ve received so far from the medical community and will continue to bring new features to our platform to make sure our users are able to easily practice anywhere.”

The company is continuously expanding its virtual reality capabilities. According to Vincent, “One capability that the team and I have wanted to bring to Fundamental Surgery and have been working on for some time now is the ability for multiple users to log into and practice in the same simulation. With self-isolation rules causing residents and students to continue their lessons and practice remotely, we actually just launched our multiuser capability this last week. Now, unlimited users can enter the same virtual OR through Fundamental Surgery and work together to perform a virtual procedure. This technology allows the students to take turns practicing skills and the supervisors to monitor their steps and ask them questions in real-time.”

“We are continuing to look at additional capabilities and technologies we can bring to Fundamental Surgery that help our trainees and their supervisors continue their work from multiple locations.”

React:

Discussion

14
DS
Dr. Sarah MitchellOrthopedic Surgeon · Mayo Clinic

This is a fascinating development. In my practice we've seen similar outcomes with the revised protocol. The key differentiator seems to be patient selection criteria. Has anyone else noticed the correlation with BMI thresholds?

8
JT
James Thornton, MDSpine Fellow · HSS

Great point. I'd push back slightly on the conclusion, the sample size in the cited study is too small to draw population-level inferences. That said, the directional signal is compelling and worth a larger RCT.

5
RP
R. PatelSports Medicine · Stanford

We implemented a similar approach last year. Early results are promising but we're still gathering 12-month follow-up data. Happy to share our protocol if anyone is interested.

Join the conversation

Orthopedic professionals are discussing this. Sign in and upgrade to read every comment and add your voice.

Subscribe

Get Full Access

Read every OTW article and join member discussions for $24.99/month.

Get Full Access

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Orthopedics This Week

The most trusted source in orthopedic industry news since 2005. Covering spine, joints, trauma, biologics, and the business of orthopedics.

A publication of RRY Publications, LLC

LinkedInXFacebook

Categories

  • Spine
  • Joints
  • Upper Extremities
  • Foot & Ankle
  • Sports Medicine
  • Pain Mgmt
  • Trauma
  • Biologics
  • Technology
  • People
  • Company News
  • Legal & Regulatory

Resources

  • Subscribe
  • Community Posts
  • Job Board
  • Press Release Opportunities
  • Power Rankings
  • About OTW
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Get Full Access

Unlimited articles, community posts, and Power Rankings.

Get Full Access

Plans start at $24.99/mo · Annual saves 20%

© 2026 Orthopedics This Week · RRY Publications, LLC

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceCookie Policy