Hall Walter A, Truwit Charles L
Department of Neurosurgery, SUNY Upstate Medical University, 750 East Adams Street, Syracuse, NY 13210, USA.
Acta Neurochir Suppl. 2011;109:119-29. doi: 10.1007/978-3-211-99651-5_19.
Neurosurgeons have become reliant on image-guidance to perform safe and successful surgery both time-efficiently and cost-effectively. Neuronavigation typically involves either rigid (frame-based) or skull-mounted (frameless) stereotactic guidance derived from computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that is obtained days or immediately before the planned surgical procedure. These systems do not accommodate for brain shift that is unavoidable once the cranium is opened and cerebrospinal fluid is lost. Intraoperative MRI (ioMRI) systems ranging in strength from 0.12 to 3 Tesla (T) have been developed in part because they afford neurosurgeons the opportunity to accommodate for brain shift during surgery. Other distinct advantages of ioMRI include the excellent soft tissue discrimination, the ability to view the surgical site in three dimensions, and the ability to "see" tumor beyond the surface visualization of the surgeon's eye, either with or without a surgical microscope. The enhanced ability to view the tumor being biopsied or resected allows the surgeon to choose a safe surgical corridor that avoids critical structures, maximizes the extent of the tumor resection, and confirms that an intraoperative hemorrhage has not resulted from surgery. Although all ioMRI systems allow for basic T1- and T2-weighted imaging, only high-field (>1.5 T) MRI systems are capable of MR spectroscopy (MRS), MR angiography (MRA), MR venography (MRV), diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and brain activation studies. By identifying vascular structures with MRA and MRV, it may be possible to prevent their inadvertent injury during surgery. Biopsying those areas of elevated phosphocholine on MRS may improve the diagnostic yield for brain biopsy. Mapping out eloquent brain function may influence the surgical path to a tumor being resected or biopsied. The optimal field strength for an ioMRI-guided surgical system and the best configuration for that system are as yet undecided.
神经外科医生已经依赖图像引导来高效且经济地实施安全、成功的手术。神经导航通常涉及基于计算机断层扫描(CT)或磁共振成像(MRI)的刚性(基于框架)或颅骨固定(无框架)立体定向引导,这些图像是在计划手术前数天或即将手术前获取的。一旦颅骨打开且脑脊液流失,这些系统无法适应不可避免的脑移位。部分原因是术中MRI(ioMRI)系统的场强范围从0.12到3特斯拉(T),它们为神经外科医生提供了在手术过程中适应脑移位的机会。ioMRI的其他显著优势包括出色的软组织分辨能力、三维观察手术部位的能力,以及无论有无手术显微镜,都能在外科医生肉眼的表面可视化之外“看到”肿瘤的能力。增强的观察活检或切除肿瘤的能力使外科医生能够选择安全的手术通道,避免关键结构,最大限度地扩大肿瘤切除范围,并确认手术未导致术中出血。尽管所有ioMRI系统都允许进行基本的T1加权和T2加权成像,但只有高场(>1.5 T)MRI系统能够进行磁共振波谱(MRS)、磁共振血管造影(MRA)、磁共振静脉造影(MRV)、扩散加权成像(DWI)和脑激活研究。通过MRA和MRV识别血管结构,可能在手术过程中防止其意外损伤。对MRS上磷酸胆碱升高的区域进行活检可能提高脑活检的诊断率。描绘明确的脑功能可能会影响切除或活检肿瘤的手术路径。ioMRI引导手术系统的最佳场强和该系统的最佳配置尚未确定。