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Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance

Background: While performing surgeries in the OR, surgeons and assistants often need to access several information regarding surgical planning and/or procedures related to the surgery itself, or the accessory equipment to perform certain operations. The accessibility of this information often relies...

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Autores principales: Cofano, Fabio, Di Perna, Giuseppe, Bozzaro, Marco, Longo, Alessandro, Marengo, Nicola, Zenga, Francesco, Zullo, Nicola, Cavalieri, Matteo, Damiani, Luca, Boges, Daniya J., Agus, Marco, Garbossa, Diego, Calì, Corrado
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8042331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33859995
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.657901
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author Cofano, Fabio
Di Perna, Giuseppe
Bozzaro, Marco
Longo, Alessandro
Marengo, Nicola
Zenga, Francesco
Zullo, Nicola
Cavalieri, Matteo
Damiani, Luca
Boges, Daniya J.
Agus, Marco
Garbossa, Diego
Calì, Corrado
author_facet Cofano, Fabio
Di Perna, Giuseppe
Bozzaro, Marco
Longo, Alessandro
Marengo, Nicola
Zenga, Francesco
Zullo, Nicola
Cavalieri, Matteo
Damiani, Luca
Boges, Daniya J.
Agus, Marco
Garbossa, Diego
Calì, Corrado
author_sort Cofano, Fabio
collection PubMed
description Background: While performing surgeries in the OR, surgeons and assistants often need to access several information regarding surgical planning and/or procedures related to the surgery itself, or the accessory equipment to perform certain operations. The accessibility of this information often relies on the physical presence of technical and medical specialists in the OR, which is increasingly difficult due to the number of limitations imposed by the COVID emergency to avoid overcrowded environments or external personnel. Here, we analyze several scenarios where we equipped OR personnel with augmented reality (AR) glasses, allowing a remote specialist to guide OR operations through voice and ad-hoc visuals, superimposed to the field of view of the operator wearing them. Methods: This study is a preliminary case series of prospective collected data about the use of AR-assistance in spine surgery from January to July 2020. The technology has been used on a cohort of 12 patients affected by degenerative lumbar spine disease with lumbar sciatica co-morbidities. Surgeons and OR specialists were equipped with AR devices, customized with P2P videoconference commercial apps, or customized holographic apps. The devices were tested during surgeries for lumbar arthrodesis in a multicenter experience involving author's Institutions. Findings: A total number of 12 lumbar arthrodesis have been performed while using the described AR technology, with application spanning from telementoring (3), teaching (2), surgical planning superimposition and interaction with the hologram using a custom application for Microsoft hololens (1). Surgeons wearing the AR goggles reported a positive feedback as for the ergonomy, wearability and comfort during the procedure; being able to visualize a 3D reconstruction during surgery was perceived as a straightforward benefit, allowing to speed-up procedures, thus limiting post-operational complications. The possibility of remotely interacting with a specialist on the glasses was a potent added value during COVID emergency, due to limited access of non-resident personnel in the OR. Interpretation: By allowing surgeons to overlay digital medical content on actual surroundings, augmented reality surgery can be exploited easily in multiple scenarios by adapting commercially available or custom-made apps to several use cases. The possibility to observe directly the operatory theater through the eyes of the surgeon might be a game-changer, giving the chance to unexperienced surgeons to be virtually at the site of the operation, or allowing a remote experienced operator to guide wisely the unexperienced surgeon during a procedure.
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spelling pubmed-80423312021-04-14 Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance Cofano, Fabio Di Perna, Giuseppe Bozzaro, Marco Longo, Alessandro Marengo, Nicola Zenga, Francesco Zullo, Nicola Cavalieri, Matteo Damiani, Luca Boges, Daniya J. Agus, Marco Garbossa, Diego Calì, Corrado Front Surg Surgery Background: While performing surgeries in the OR, surgeons and assistants often need to access several information regarding surgical planning and/or procedures related to the surgery itself, or the accessory equipment to perform certain operations. The accessibility of this information often relies on the physical presence of technical and medical specialists in the OR, which is increasingly difficult due to the number of limitations imposed by the COVID emergency to avoid overcrowded environments or external personnel. Here, we analyze several scenarios where we equipped OR personnel with augmented reality (AR) glasses, allowing a remote specialist to guide OR operations through voice and ad-hoc visuals, superimposed to the field of view of the operator wearing them. Methods: This study is a preliminary case series of prospective collected data about the use of AR-assistance in spine surgery from January to July 2020. The technology has been used on a cohort of 12 patients affected by degenerative lumbar spine disease with lumbar sciatica co-morbidities. Surgeons and OR specialists were equipped with AR devices, customized with P2P videoconference commercial apps, or customized holographic apps. The devices were tested during surgeries for lumbar arthrodesis in a multicenter experience involving author's Institutions. Findings: A total number of 12 lumbar arthrodesis have been performed while using the described AR technology, with application spanning from telementoring (3), teaching (2), surgical planning superimposition and interaction with the hologram using a custom application for Microsoft hololens (1). Surgeons wearing the AR goggles reported a positive feedback as for the ergonomy, wearability and comfort during the procedure; being able to visualize a 3D reconstruction during surgery was perceived as a straightforward benefit, allowing to speed-up procedures, thus limiting post-operational complications. The possibility of remotely interacting with a specialist on the glasses was a potent added value during COVID emergency, due to limited access of non-resident personnel in the OR. Interpretation: By allowing surgeons to overlay digital medical content on actual surroundings, augmented reality surgery can be exploited easily in multiple scenarios by adapting commercially available or custom-made apps to several use cases. The possibility to observe directly the operatory theater through the eyes of the surgeon might be a game-changer, giving the chance to unexperienced surgeons to be virtually at the site of the operation, or allowing a remote experienced operator to guide wisely the unexperienced surgeon during a procedure. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8042331/ /pubmed/33859995 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.657901 Text en Copyright © 2021 Cofano, Di Perna, Bozzaro, Longo, Marengo, Zenga, Zullo, Cavalieri, Damiani, Boges, Agus, Garbossa and Calì. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Surgery
Cofano, Fabio
Di Perna, Giuseppe
Bozzaro, Marco
Longo, Alessandro
Marengo, Nicola
Zenga, Francesco
Zullo, Nicola
Cavalieri, Matteo
Damiani, Luca
Boges, Daniya J.
Agus, Marco
Garbossa, Diego
Calì, Corrado
Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance
title Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance
title_full Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance
title_fullStr Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance
title_full_unstemmed Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance
title_short Augmented Reality in Medical Practice: From Spine Surgery to Remote Assistance
title_sort augmented reality in medical practice: from spine surgery to remote assistance
topic Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8042331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33859995
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.657901
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