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Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain

Augmented reality surgery systems are playing an increasing role in the operating room, but applying such systems to neurosurgery presents particular challenges. In addition to using augmented reality technology to display the position of the surgical target position in 3D in real time, the applicat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chiou, Shin-Yan, Zhang, Zhi-Yue, Liu, Hao-Li, Yan, Jiun-Lin, Wei, Kuo-Chen, Chen, Pin-Yuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9601392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36292263
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10101815
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author Chiou, Shin-Yan
Zhang, Zhi-Yue
Liu, Hao-Li
Yan, Jiun-Lin
Wei, Kuo-Chen
Chen, Pin-Yuan
author_facet Chiou, Shin-Yan
Zhang, Zhi-Yue
Liu, Hao-Li
Yan, Jiun-Lin
Wei, Kuo-Chen
Chen, Pin-Yuan
author_sort Chiou, Shin-Yan
collection PubMed
description Augmented reality surgery systems are playing an increasing role in the operating room, but applying such systems to neurosurgery presents particular challenges. In addition to using augmented reality technology to display the position of the surgical target position in 3D in real time, the application must also display the scalpel entry point and scalpel orientation, with accurate superposition on the patient. To improve the intuitiveness, efficiency, and accuracy of extra-ventricular drain surgery, this paper proposes an augmented reality surgical navigation system which accurately superimposes the surgical target position, scalpel entry point, and scalpel direction on a patient’s head and displays this data on a tablet. The accuracy of the optical measurement system (NDI Polaris Vicra) was first independently tested, and then complemented by the design of functions to help the surgeon quickly identify the surgical target position and determine the preferred entry point. A tablet PC was used to display the superimposed images of the surgical target, entry point, and scalpel on top of the patient, allowing for correct scalpel orientation. Digital imaging and communications in medicine (DICOM) results for the patient’s computed tomography were used to create a phantom and its associated AR model. This model was then imported into the application, which was then executed on the tablet. In the preoperative phase, the technician first spent 5–7 min to superimpose the virtual image of the head and the scalpel. The surgeon then took 2 min to identify the intended target position and entry point position on the tablet, which then dynamically displayed the superimposed image of the head, target position, entry point position, and scalpel (including the scalpel tip and scalpel orientation). Multiple experiments were successfully conducted on the phantom, along with six practical trials of clinical neurosurgical EVD. In the 2D-plane-superposition model, the optical measurement system (NDI Polaris Vicra) provided highly accurate visualization (2.01 ± 1.12 mm). In hospital-based clinical trials, the average technician preparation time was 6 min, while the surgeon required an average of 3.5 min to set the target and entry-point positions and accurately overlay the orientation with an NDI surgical stick. In the preparation phase, the average time required for the DICOM-formatted image processing and program import was 120 ± 30 min. The accuracy of the designed augmented reality optical surgical navigation system met clinical requirements, and can provide a visual and intuitive guide for neurosurgeons. The surgeon can use the tablet application to obtain real-time DICOM-formatted images of the patient, change the position of the surgical entry point, and instantly obtain an updated surgical path and surgical angle. The proposed design can be used as the basis for various augmented reality brain surgery navigation systems in the future.
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spelling pubmed-96013922022-10-27 Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain Chiou, Shin-Yan Zhang, Zhi-Yue Liu, Hao-Li Yan, Jiun-Lin Wei, Kuo-Chen Chen, Pin-Yuan Healthcare (Basel) Article Augmented reality surgery systems are playing an increasing role in the operating room, but applying such systems to neurosurgery presents particular challenges. In addition to using augmented reality technology to display the position of the surgical target position in 3D in real time, the application must also display the scalpel entry point and scalpel orientation, with accurate superposition on the patient. To improve the intuitiveness, efficiency, and accuracy of extra-ventricular drain surgery, this paper proposes an augmented reality surgical navigation system which accurately superimposes the surgical target position, scalpel entry point, and scalpel direction on a patient’s head and displays this data on a tablet. The accuracy of the optical measurement system (NDI Polaris Vicra) was first independently tested, and then complemented by the design of functions to help the surgeon quickly identify the surgical target position and determine the preferred entry point. A tablet PC was used to display the superimposed images of the surgical target, entry point, and scalpel on top of the patient, allowing for correct scalpel orientation. Digital imaging and communications in medicine (DICOM) results for the patient’s computed tomography were used to create a phantom and its associated AR model. This model was then imported into the application, which was then executed on the tablet. In the preoperative phase, the technician first spent 5–7 min to superimpose the virtual image of the head and the scalpel. The surgeon then took 2 min to identify the intended target position and entry point position on the tablet, which then dynamically displayed the superimposed image of the head, target position, entry point position, and scalpel (including the scalpel tip and scalpel orientation). Multiple experiments were successfully conducted on the phantom, along with six practical trials of clinical neurosurgical EVD. In the 2D-plane-superposition model, the optical measurement system (NDI Polaris Vicra) provided highly accurate visualization (2.01 ± 1.12 mm). In hospital-based clinical trials, the average technician preparation time was 6 min, while the surgeon required an average of 3.5 min to set the target and entry-point positions and accurately overlay the orientation with an NDI surgical stick. In the preparation phase, the average time required for the DICOM-formatted image processing and program import was 120 ± 30 min. The accuracy of the designed augmented reality optical surgical navigation system met clinical requirements, and can provide a visual and intuitive guide for neurosurgeons. The surgeon can use the tablet application to obtain real-time DICOM-formatted images of the patient, change the position of the surgical entry point, and instantly obtain an updated surgical path and surgical angle. The proposed design can be used as the basis for various augmented reality brain surgery navigation systems in the future. MDPI 2022-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9601392/ /pubmed/36292263 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10101815 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chiou, Shin-Yan
Zhang, Zhi-Yue
Liu, Hao-Li
Yan, Jiun-Lin
Wei, Kuo-Chen
Chen, Pin-Yuan
Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain
title Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain
title_full Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain
title_fullStr Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain
title_full_unstemmed Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain
title_short Augmented Reality Surgical Navigation System for External Ventricular Drain
title_sort augmented reality surgical navigation system for external ventricular drain
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9601392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36292263
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10101815
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