Park Avenue surgeon uses Google Glass in the operating room

He lifts eyebrows with the blink of an eye.

Park Avenue plastic surgeon Dr. Ramtin Kassir is using Google Glass to record surgeries and consultations and to access medical records, hands-free, in the operating room.

“I’ve had a patient say, ‘You look like you’re from “The Matrix!” ’ ” said Kassir, whose clients include some of “The Real Housewives of New Jersey.”

“Every one of them thinks it’s cool,” he said.

But Kassir, 47, says his smart goggles aren’t just a gimmick — they’re a game changer for doctors.

Kassir wears the $1,500 futuristic frames to snap photos with a blink — literally — and to live-stream surgeries for medical students. Rather than handing patients a mirror, he records and displays their faces in real time on a projection screen in his office.

“Every day, I come up with new uses,” Kassir said. “We showed on a big-screen TV . . . the inside of someone’s nose and their crooked septum and clogged sinuses.”

Google Glass looks similar to a normal pair of eyeglasses but with a tiny projector over the right eye that displays a semi-transparent computer screen. Kassir needs only say, “OK, Glass” followed by “Take a picture” or “Record a video” and it’s done.

One client, Jasmina Soldatov, says she kept Kassir’s recording of their 30-minute consultation and plans to watch the video of her sinus surgery and rhinoplasty when they’re done.

“I was intrigued right away,” said Soldatov, 30, of Dallas. “I can watch the whole procedure and have it for my records.”

Kassir snagged the technology through Google’s Glass Explorer program, which allows companies and professionals of all stripes to experiment with the device.

The high-tech specs aren’t yet publicly available, but they are being tested by the military, hospitals and even NBA teams, which used Glassware to broadcast first-person views during games.

A Boston doctor says the eyewear saved a man’s life when he was brought into the ER for brain bleeding. The doc instantly found the ­patient’s drug allergies via Glass.