TY - JOUR
T1 - Robotic System for MRI-Guided Stereotactic Neurosurgery
AU - Li, Gang
AU - Su, Hao
AU - Cole, Gregory A.
AU - Shang, Weijian
AU - Harrington, Kevin
AU - Camilo, Alex
AU - Pilitsis, Julie G.
AU - Fischer, Gregory S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1964-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2015/4/1
Y1 - 2015/4/1
N2 - Stereotaxy is a neurosurgical technique that can take several hours to reach a specific target, typically utilizing a mechanical frame and guided by preoperative imaging. An error in any one of the numerous steps or deviations of the target anatomy from the preoperative plan such as brain shift (up to 20 mm), may affect the targeting accuracy and thus the treatment effectiveness. Moreover, because the procedure is typically performed through a small burr hole opening in the skull that prevents tissue visualization, the intervention is basically "blind" for the operator with limited means of intraoperative confirmation that may result in reduced accuracy and safety. The presented system is intended to address the clinical needs for enhanced efficiency, accuracy, and safety of image-guided stereotactic neurosurgery for deep brain stimulation lead placement. The study describes a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided, robotically actuated stereotactic neural intervention system for deep brain stimulation procedure, which offers the potential of reducing procedure duration while improving targeting accuracy and enhancing safety. This is achieved through simultaneous robotic manipulation of the instrument and interactively updated in situ MRI guidance that enables visualization of the anatomy and interventional instrument. During simultaneous actuation and imaging, the system has demonstrated less than 15% signal-to-noise ratio variation and less than 0.20% geometric distortion artifact without affecting the imaging usability to visualize and guide the procedure. Optical tracking and MRI phantom experiments streamline the clinical workflow of the prototype system, corroborating targeting accuracy with three-axis root mean square error 1.38±0.45 mm in tip position and 2.03±0.58° in insertion angle.
AB - Stereotaxy is a neurosurgical technique that can take several hours to reach a specific target, typically utilizing a mechanical frame and guided by preoperative imaging. An error in any one of the numerous steps or deviations of the target anatomy from the preoperative plan such as brain shift (up to 20 mm), may affect the targeting accuracy and thus the treatment effectiveness. Moreover, because the procedure is typically performed through a small burr hole opening in the skull that prevents tissue visualization, the intervention is basically "blind" for the operator with limited means of intraoperative confirmation that may result in reduced accuracy and safety. The presented system is intended to address the clinical needs for enhanced efficiency, accuracy, and safety of image-guided stereotactic neurosurgery for deep brain stimulation lead placement. The study describes a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided, robotically actuated stereotactic neural intervention system for deep brain stimulation procedure, which offers the potential of reducing procedure duration while improving targeting accuracy and enhancing safety. This is achieved through simultaneous robotic manipulation of the instrument and interactively updated in situ MRI guidance that enables visualization of the anatomy and interventional instrument. During simultaneous actuation and imaging, the system has demonstrated less than 15% signal-to-noise ratio variation and less than 0.20% geometric distortion artifact without affecting the imaging usability to visualize and guide the procedure. Optical tracking and MRI phantom experiments streamline the clinical workflow of the prototype system, corroborating targeting accuracy with three-axis root mean square error 1.38±0.45 mm in tip position and 2.03±0.58° in insertion angle.
KW - deep brain stimulation
KW - image-guided therapy
KW - MRI-compatible robotics
KW - stereotactic neurosurgery
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U2 - 10.1109/TBME.2014.2367233
DO - 10.1109/TBME.2014.2367233
M3 - Article
C2 - 25376035
AN - SCOPUS:84925854049
SN - 0018-9294
VL - 62
SP - 1077
EP - 1088
JO - IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
JF - IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
IS - 4
M1 - 6945849
ER -