The light weight robots used for robotized tele-echography allow the medical expert to remotely operate a 2D-ultrasound probe. The real-time analysis of the patient's ultrasound images, received via a standard communication link, provides the expert with relevant information to define a diagnosis. The clinical validations of the robotized tele-echography concept show that it is possible to overcome the lack of sonographers in medically isolated sites. The robot probe-holder is usually positioned and held on the patient's body by a paramedical staff based on information provided by the specialist via videoconferencing. However, the small mass of the robot, the fact that it is held by an assistant on the patient's body and the patient's physi...