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Robotic Surgery Developer Reveals Haptic Technology Prevents Saw From Leaving Bone During Joint Replacement

The Ultimate Human · Dr. Jason Snibbe: On Why Meniscus Surgery Backfires, Prehab, Peptides, & Robotic Joint Surgery · June 16, 2026
Robotic Surgery Developer Reveals Haptic Technology Prevents Saw From Leaving Bone During Joint Replacement
The Ultimate Human
The Ultimate Human
Dr. Jason Snibbe: On Why Meniscus Surgery Backfires, Prehab, Peptides, & Robotic Joint Surgery
"I'm 6'4", I weigh about 215 pounds. If I lean all my body against that robotic arm, it will not move. The haptic technology keeps the saw or the cutting device within the parameters of the bone, and it will never exit."
Dr. Snibbe, who worked on the development team for robotic shoulder surgery, explained that haptic technology in robotic joint replacement prevents surgical saws from exiting bone boundaries even under full body weight pressure. Traditional surgery allows saws to cut surrounding tissue creating scar tissue and trauma, while the robot uses CT scans to customize implant positioning to each patient's unique anatomy rather than standardized alignment.

About this episode

On this episode of The Ultimate Human Podcast, host Gary Brecka interviewed Dr. Jason Snibbe, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon and assistant team physician for the LA Clippers, Lakers, Kings, Angels, and multiple professional sports franchises. Dr. Snibbe is pioneering a radical departure from conventional orthopedic practice by combining minimally invasive robotic surgery with extensive prehabilitation protocols, peptide therapy, and biohacking modalities like hyperbaric oxygen and red light therapy. The conversation centered on his controversial stance that up to 30% of traditional meniscus surgery patients require knee replacement within months due to surgical trauma, and his advocacy for PRP and exosome injections instead. Dr. Snibbe revealed he cured his own two-year Achilles tendonitis in six weeks using BPC-157 and TB-500 peptides, transforming his clinical approach. He detailed how robotic surgery uses haptic technology and patient-specific CT scans to customize joint replacements to individual anatomy, preventing the saw from ever leaving bone boundaries. The surgeon disclosed that professional athletes consistently report needing a full year to regain explosive performance despite returning to play at six months post-surgery. He is building a $100+ million hospital in Las Vegas focused on controlling the entire episode of care, integrating biohacking into pre- and post-surgical recovery. Dr. Snibbe also founded Snibs footwear company to reduce workplace injury and launched a line of peptides specifically for surgical recovery. The episode concluded with discussion of future AI integration in surgery and how postmenopausal estrogen loss drives joint arthritis beyond simple mechanical wear.

Key takeaways

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