“Don't think of robots as replacements for humans — think of them as things that will help make us better at tackling many of the problems we face.” EOIN TREACY There are various milestones in medicine that are considered turning points in the way we currently practice. Such changes revolutionize and alter the course of medical practice. Coronary artery imaging and coronary artery revascularization have gone through multiple such revolutionary and evolutionary changes, driven by skilled, visionary, and entrepreneurial scientists. And serendipity. Whether it is the accidental injection of a large volume of contrast into the right coronary artery by Mason Sones in 1958, or the meticulous and painstaking work that led to the first percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with rudimentary balloon-tipped catheters by Andreas Gruentzig in 1977 to the advent of sophisticated drug-eluting stents in 2002 [12] .