On August 12, 2025, a surgeon in New Delhi put on a pair of smart glasses and changed what it means to be trained as a doctor. Dr. Vijayant Govinda Gupta, one of India's leading urologists, performed the country's first AI-assisted surgery using Ray-Ban Meta AI Glasses at Govinda Medicentre in New Delhi. As he operated, the procedure was streamed in real time to leading medical centres across Europe — surgeons and trainees in Paris, Berlin, and Rome watching every incision, every decision, every technique as it happened, asking questions through a live Q&A interface and receiving answers from the surgeon without him putting down a single instrument. It was surgery. It was education. And it was a declaration that Indian medical expertise is no longer confined to Indian geography. Surgical training in specialised fields has always required physical presence. To learn a rare technique, a surgeon from Pune or Patna would need to travel to a centre where that technique was being performed — often abroad, always expensive, always time-consuming. International surgical workshops that teach advanced procedures cost thousands of dollars, require weeks away from practice, and are accessible only to those with the resources to attend. Dr. Gupta had spent years thinking about this problem. "International training in men's health surgery has always required travel, cost, and time," he said. "With Meta AI, I can bring my surgical expertise to a doctor in Paris, Berlin, or Rome without them leaving their hospital." The technology that made this possible was a pair of AI-powered glasses. Worn during surgery, the glasses streamed ultra-high-definition footage from the surgeon's exact perspective — not a camera mounted above the operating table, but the surgeon's own point of view, giving remote observers the closest approximation of actually standing in the operating room. The concept of wearable surgical broadcasting is not entirely new. Google Glass had been experimented with in surgical settings over a decade ago, with limited success. What Dr. Gupta achieved in 2025 went significantly further — combining real-time AI assistance, ultra-high-definition video streaming, instant access to patient data, and a live interactive interface, all hands-free. The result was a procedure during which the surgeon never broke sterility, never shifted attention from the patient, and simultaneously educated a room of European doctors thousands of kilometres away. India produces some of the world's most technically skilled surgeons. The challenge has always been exporting that expertise — sharing Indian surgical knowledge with the global medical community at scale. What Dr. Gupta demonstrated is something fundamentally different. It is surgical expertise transmitted in real time, at zero incremental cost per viewer, accessible to any trained surgeon with an internet connection. The same framework — AI-assisted wearable broadcasting of complex procedures — can be applied to cardiac surgery, neurosurgery, orthopedic reconstruction, and virtually every other specialised field. Indian surgeons with rare expertise can now teach the world from their own operating rooms. The procedure was performed at Govinda Medicentre, Dr. Gupta's dedicated urology and andrology hospital in New Delhi. Recognised as a hub for men's health treatment across South Asia, the centre combines advanced operating theatres, modern diagnostics, and telemedicine infrastructure. Medosist is India's most trusted doctor discovery platform, celebrating Indian doctors who are not only transforming patient outcomes at home but redefining India's place in global medicine. Discover top urologists, surgeons, and specialists in New Delhi and across India's major cities at Medosist.com.