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AppleAR/VR/MRTechVision Pro

Apple Vision Pro successfully guides the first eye surgery

A New York ophthalmologist proved that Apple Vision Pro can revolutionize the operating room with immersive 3D surgical visualization.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Apr 28, 2026, 12:29 PM EDT
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The Apple Vision Pro computer glasses are presented to customers at the Apple Store on Kurfürstendamm.
Photo: Monika Skolimowska / Alamy Live News
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When Dr. Eric Rosenberg put on an Apple Vision Pro headset in an operating room last October, he didn’t just test out new technology—he rewrote the history books on what’s possible in modern surgery. The New York ophthalmologist became the first surgeon anywhere in the world to perform a cataract surgery using the mixed reality headset as his primary visualization tool, marking a moment that blurs the line between science fiction and everyday medical practice. Since that groundbreaking first case, Dr. Rosenberg and his team at SightMD have performed hundreds of additional surgeries using the same setup, proving this wasn’t a one-off stunt but the beginning of something genuinely transformative in the operating room.

What makes this achievement even more impressive is the sophistication behind it. Dr. Rosenberg didn’t just strap on a Vision Pro and hope for the best—he co-developed ScopeXR, a spatial computing software platform specifically designed for ophthalmic surgery, working alongside Michael Simmons to create a system that transforms how surgeons see and interact with their work. The platform streams real-time surgical imaging directly into the surgeon’s headset from existing 3D digital surgical microscopes, like Alcon’s Ngenuity 3D Visualization System, creating an immersive stereoscopic 3D view that actually enhances the surgeon’s depth perception and precision. What’s particularly clever about ScopeXR is that it doesn’t require hospitals to completely rip out their existing surgical infrastructure—it’s hardware-agnostic and integrates through standard connections like HDMI, USB, or wireless NDI protocols, meaning other hospitals and surgical centers could adopt this technology without a major overhaul.

But the real magic of this innovation goes way beyond just having a better view during surgery. One of the most game-changing features of ScopeXR is its real-time remote collaboration capability, which basically means a world-class surgeon sitting in Boston can guide a less experienced surgeon performing a difficult case thousands of miles away—they see exactly what the operating surgeon sees, including live microscope feeds and diagnostic data, and they can communicate instantly through secure two-way audio. Dr. Rosenberg put it beautifully when he said, “We are now able to bring the world’s best surgeon into any operating room, at any hour, from anywhere on the planet.” Think about the implications here: a resident performing their first cataract surgery can have mentorship from someone with decades of experience, someone working through an unexpected complication can get expert guidance in real-time, and patients in underserved areas could theoretically access the best surgical expertise available without traveling. This isn’t just about convenience—it’s genuinely about democratizing access to world-class medical care.

The educational value is equally significant. Medical students, residents, and fellows can now observe surgeries with unprecedented clarity and immersion without actually being in the operating room, which solves a real problem in surgical training. Traditionally, multiple trainees crowding around an operating microscope not only makes the procedure awkward for the surgeon but also limits how many students can effectively observe at once. With ScopeXR and the Vision Pro, you could potentially have dozens of trainees watching from remote locations with crystal-clear immersive views, learning the nuances of surgical technique while the surgeon maintains a sterile field and isn’t distracted by people hovering overhead.

The fact that Dr. Rosenberg and his team at SightMD have already performed hundreds of cases since October speaks volumes about both the reliability and the practicality of this system. SightMD itself is one of the largest ophthalmology practices in the United States, operating more than 38 locations across New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts, so they’re not a boutique clinic experimenting with cutting-edge tech—they’re a serious, established medical institution that’s made a major investment in spatial computing for everyday clinical work. That kind of scale and volume gives us confidence that this technology has moved past the “interesting experiment” phase and into “viable clinical tool” territory.

What’s particularly clever about positioning this in the broader context of healthcare innovation is that this represents exactly what smart technologists and doctors can accomplish when they work together from the ground up. Rather than waiting for Apple or some Silicon Valley company to figure out what surgeons need, Dr. Rosenberg took an existing platform—the Vision Pro—and worked with his team to build purpose-built software around it. He understood the specific constraints and opportunities of ophthalmic surgery, and ScopeXR was architected with those real-world needs in mind, which is why it actually works rather than becoming vaporware.

Looking ahead, the implications ripple outward into other surgical specialties beyond ophthalmology. While ScopeXR was designed specifically for eye surgery, the underlying principles of immersive visualization, real-time collaboration, and diagnostic data integration apply to pretty much any surgical procedure. Imagine orthopedic surgeons doing joint replacement, cardiac surgeons doing delicate heart procedures, or neurosurgeons operating on the brain—all with the same capabilities ScopeXR brings to cataract surgery. The regulatory pathways and broader deployment of this technology are still in progress, but the template has been established, and it’s going to be hard for other surgical specialties to ignore what’s being proven possible right now in operating rooms in New York.


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