About da Vinci Systems

Surgical robotics for minimally invasive surgery

Your surgeon in control

The da Vinci surgical system gives your surgeon an advanced set of instruments to use in performing robotic-assisted minimally invasive surgery. The term “robotic” often misleads people. Robots don’t perform surgery. Your surgeon performs surgery with da Vinci by using instruments that he or she guides via a console.


The da Vinci system translates your surgeon’s hand movements at the console in real time, bending and rotating the instruments while performing the procedure. The tiny wristed instruments move like a human hand, but with a greater range of motion. The da Vinci vision system also delivers highly magnified, 3D high-definition views of the surgical area. The instrument size makes it possible for surgeons to operate through one or a few small incisions.
operating room staff with vision cart

Three components of the da Vinci system

da vinci system surgeon console front view
Surgeon Console
Your surgeon sits at the console, controlling the instruments while viewing your anatomy in high-definition 3D.
da vinci system xi front view
PATIENT CART
Positioned alongside the bed, the patient cart holds the camera and instruments that the surgeon controls from the console.
davinci surgical system vision cart
VISION CART
The vision cart makes communication between components possible and supports the 3D high-definition vision system.

A family of technologies

Hospitals may have one or multiple versions of the da Vinci available. These systems all work to enable your surgeon to perform minimally invasive surgery. The different models include:

  1. In the U.S., the da Vinci SP system is only cleared for use in single-port urological procedures, lateral oropharyngectomy procedures (commonly referred to as radical tonsillectomy) and tongue base resection.