🛠️ Technical Maximalism
Technical maximalism refers to:
The tendency to apply the maximum available technology, tools, or surgical complexity to a clinical problem — regardless of whether such escalation improves outcomes, reduces risk, or respects the patient's context.
🧠 In Neurosurgery
- Using exoscopes, fluorescence, intraoperative MRI, tubular retractors, and neuronavigation in every case, even when not clinically justified
- Equating complexity with quality
- Assuming that “more tech” = “better surgery”
“The lesion was small and asymptomatic, but they brought out the full armamentarium — classic case of technical maximalism.”
⚠️ Consequences
- Increased operative time, cost, and risk
- Erosion of clinical judgment
- Over-reliance on tools instead of anatomical understanding
- Loss of proportionality between intervention and benefit
🔍 Related Concepts
Synonyms: surgical overengineering, gadget-driven surgery, technophilic excess
Opposite: Technical restraint, appropriate complexity, outcome-guided practice