LEM Surgical Dynamis Robot Makes History as First Surgical Humanoid
LEM Surgical Dynamis made its global debut at CES 2026. The system is billed as the world’s first surgical humanoid designed for real operating rooms. As a result, robotic surgery just reached a new milestone.
Developed by Switzerland-based LEM Surgical, Dynamis focuses on spine and orthopedic procedures. It uses three robotic arms to support surgeons during complex operations. Two arms guide instruments, while a third controls the camera.
The entire system sits on a compact cart. Therefore, it fits neatly under the surgical table. This design allows easy integration into existing operating rooms without major layout changes.
LEM Surgical Dynamis is not a concept. The company already used it in live surgeries. In November 2025, surgeons performed the first U.S. procedures at Southern Hills Hospital in Las Vegas.
🧠 AI Precision Redefines Robotic Spine Surgery
LEM Surgical Dynamics runs on NVIDIA Isaac for Healthcare with onboard AI. The system compensates for tiny human movements in real time. As a result, surgeons maintain extreme precision throughout procedures.
The robot integrates smoothly with imaging systems. In addition, it supports surgical navigation and pre-operative planning. A unified software platform keeps workflows simple and efficient.
FDA clearance marked a key step forward. It confirmed the system meets strict safety and performance standards. Therefore, hospitals can trust it in real clinical settings.
LEM now looks toward future development. The company plans to work with NVIDIA’s Physical AI platform. This approach could further improve adaptability and surgical accuracy.
Experts believe this launch signals a shift in robotic surgery. LEM Surgical Dynamis shows humanoid systems can move beyond labs. With proven results, robotic spine surgery enters a smarter and safer era.

