In the trial, researchers from the University of Oxford in the UK performed the membrane-removal surgery on 12 patients.
Six of those patients underwent the traditional procedure, and six underwent the new robotic technique.
Researchers found that those patients in the robot group experienced significantly fewer hemorrhages and less damage to the retina.
The robot acts like a mechanical hand with seven independent motors that can make movements as precise as one micron, researchers said.
However, the surgeon is in control, using a joystick and touch screen to manoeuvre the robot hand while monitoring movements through the operating microscope.
"The robotic technology is very exciting, and the ability to operate under the retina safely will represent a huge advance in developing genetic and stem cell treatments for retinal disease," Robert E MacLaren, professor at the University of Oxford was quoted as saying by 'Live Science'.
The team first used the system on a 70-year-old priest from UK, in September las year.
Upon the success of that surgery, they conducted a study on 11 more patients in a randomised clinical trial, hoping to measure the robotic system's accuracy compared to the human hand.
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