Journal Article10.1148/RADIOLOGY.188.3.8351341
Frameless stereotaxic integration of CT imaging data: accuracy and initial applications.
S. J. Zinreich,Scot A. Tebo,Donlin M. Long,Henry Brem,Douglas E. Mattox,M. E. Loury,C. A. Vander Kolk,Wayne M. Koch,David W. Kennedy,Robert 'Nick' Bryan +9 more
265
TL;DR: The spatial accuracy of a rapid interactive method of transferring computed tomographic information between its display on a computer screen to its source (test object, operating field), a multidimensional computer combined with a six-jointed position-sensing mechanical arm was tested with a Plexiglas model.
read more
Abstract: To evaluate the spatial accuracy of a rapid interactive method of transferring computed tomographic (CT) information between its display on a computer screen to its source (test object, operating field), a multidimensional computer combined with a six-jointed position-sensing mechanical arm was tested with a Plexiglas model consisting of 50 rods of varied height and known location, a plastic replica of the skull, and, subsequently, three patients. The median error value between image and real location was 1-2 mm (P > .95), regardless of the registration target sites. The accuracy, however, increased with the selection of widespread registration points, and 95% of all errors were below 3.70 mm (P > .95). The results compare favorably with the four most commonly used stereotaxic framed units. A misregistration error of 0.3-2.2 mm was found during intraoperative correlation between anatomy on the CT display and actual anatomic location in the operative field.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Computer-assisted neurosurgery by using a noninvasive vacuum-affixed dental cast that acts as a reference base: another step toward a unified approach in the treatment of brain tumors
Reto Bale,Johannes Burtscher,Wilhelm Eisner,Alois Obwegeser,Michael Rieger,Reinhart A. Sweeney,A. Dessl,S. M. Giacomuzzi,K. Twerdy,Werner Jaschke +9 more
TL;DR: Because of its noninvasive, rigid, reliable, and reproducible connection to the patient's head, the VBH vacuum-affixed mouthpiece grants the registration device an accuracy comparable to invasive fiducial markers.
54
Image-guided surgery of epilepsy.
TL;DR: The authors experience shows that the viewing wand system is most helpful as an adjunctive navigational device in the microsurgical treatment of epilepsy.
54
Three-dimensional navigation in otorhinolaryngological surgery with the viewing wand
Wolfgang Freysinger,Andreas R. Gunkel,Reto Bale,Michael Vogele,Christian Kremser,G Schön,Walter F. Thumfart +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the ISG Viewing Wand was used in endonasal endoscopic procedures of the paranasal sinuses, anterior skull base, and petrous bone.
49
Accuracy of computer navigation in ear, nose, throat surgery: the influence of matching strategy.
J. Claes,E. Koekelkoren,Floris L. Wuyts,Gerd M. E. Claes,Luc van den Hauwe,Paul Van de Heyning +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the effect of four different matching strategies on the accuracy of computer navigation on the face and within the nose and rhinopharynx and found that the choice of a matching strategy is a major factor in the accuracy for computer navigation for ear, nose, and throat surgery.
The Radiographic Evaluation Of Sinonasal Tumors: An Overview
Roger E. Mosesson,Peter M. Som +1 more
TL;DR: The radiologic examination is commonly employed as a precise "map" for implementation of therapy, and imaging studies are essential in the follow-up evaluation for tumor residual or recurrence.
48