Pier Cristoforo Giulianotti (born July 6, 1953 in Filattiera[1][2]) is an Italian surgeon.[3] He is a Professor of Surgery and Chief of The Division of General, Minimally Invasive, and Robotic Surgery at the University of Illinois at Chicago.[4] As of 2020 he has performed about 2,100 robotic-assisted surgeries and trained about 2,000 surgeons to perform the same.[3]
Early life and education
editHe received his medical degree from among the foremost Italian universities, “Normale” of Pisa and the University of Milan. Besides a formal General Surgery Residency, he has completed two additional Residencies in Thoracic Surgery and Vascular Surgery. During the mid-1980s he became an expert in laparoscopic surgery.[3]
Career
editBetween 1998 and 2004, he became the Head of the Department of General Surgery at Misericordia Hospital in Grosseto. Already experienced in laparoscopic and advanced open surgery, he took the challenge with the introduction of the new robotic technology in 2000. In the last eight years he has developed the largest program worldwide for robotic surgery. He has performed over 2100 minimally invasive surgeries of which more than 914 have been robotic procedures. Dr. Giulianotti was the first in the world to perform over a dozen robotic surgical procedures such as formal hepatic resection, lung resection and pancreatico-duodenectomy. Dr. Giulianotti is currently considered the foremost robotic surgeon worldwide.[5][6][3]
In April 2008, Dr. Giulianotti and his team at The University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago have inaugurated the Advanced Robotic Research and Training Laboratory, the only training center in the Midwest designed for robotic training.
Dr. Giulianotti is a founding member and was named the inaugural president of the Clinical robotic surgery association in 2009,[3]
References
edit- ^ Pier Cristoforo Giulianotti: Un robot al posto del bisturi, ToscanaOggi (Italian)
- ^ Medico di Filattiera a Chicago per operare con i robot, La Nazione (Italian)
- ^ a b c d e D. T. Max (23 September 2019). "Paging Dr. Robot. A pathbreaking surgeon prefers to do his cutting by remote control". The New Yorker. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
- ^ "Meet Pier Giulianotti, one of Fast Company's 100 Most Creative People 2009". Fast Company. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
- ^ Pier Cristoforo Giulianotti - University of Illinois at Chicago
- ^ Dall'ascella al nodulo si opera con il robot, Repubblica.it (Italian)