Zhang Wenbin, Wang Chenhao, Shen Guofang, Wang Xudong, Cai Ming, Gui Haijun, Liu Yuncai, Yang Danling
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine - Shanghai Key Laboratory of Stomatology, Shanghai, China.
Comput Aided Surg. 2012;17(5):259-67. doi: 10.3109/10929088.2012.710251.
Two key issues in image guided surgery are accurate patient-to-image registration and ongoing tracking of the patient's motion. To address these concerns, a novel device for preoperative registration and automatic tracking was designed, and the accuracy attainable with the device was evaluated in experiments with a skull and in a clinical study.
The device consists of a system of four titanium screws and four fluorescent spheres fixed to carbon bars which can be easily mounted on the maxillary dentition splint. Before surgery, CT image data of a skull with the device in place was acquired and registered in a navigation system. The rigidity and reproducibility of positioning of the device were measured in 15 repeated CT acquisitions of the skull with the device in place. The registration accuracy was compared to that obtained using micro-screw markers fixed to the maxillary alveolus. To determine the potential of the device in aiding image guided cranio-maxillofacial surgery, registration accuracy and surgical outcome were assessed.
Fifteen tests were performed for CT scanning with no loosening of the splint and device. The arithmetic mean of the standard deviation (SD) ranged from 0.47 mm to 0.70 mm. When the device was used for registration, the mean deviations for the eight anatomical structures investigated ranged from 0.56 mm at the left infra-orbital foramen to 0.96 mm at the right temple. Compared with the method in which titanium screws are fixed to the maxillary alveolus, the target registration error (TRE) obtained using the new device was much less. Using this device, clinical reduction of a zygomatic-orbital-maxillary complex fracture was successfully completed with a registration discrepancy of less than 0.5 mm.
By successfully addressing the two key issues of image guided surgery, the device could be considered accurate and potentially useful for assisting in cranio-maxillofacial surgery.
图像引导手术中的两个关键问题是患者与图像的精确配准以及对患者运动的持续跟踪。为解决这些问题,设计了一种用于术前配准和自动跟踪的新型设备,并在颅骨实验和临床研究中评估了该设备可达到的精度。
该设备由四个钛螺钉和四个固定在碳棒上的荧光球组成的系统构成,该系统可轻松安装在上颌牙列夹板上。手术前,获取带有该设备的颅骨的CT图像数据,并在导航系统中进行配准。在对放置有该设备的颅骨进行15次重复CT采集时,测量该设备定位的刚性和可重复性。将配准精度与使用固定在上颌牙槽上的微螺钉标记所获得的精度进行比较。为确定该设备在辅助图像引导颅颌面外科手术中的潜力,评估了配准精度和手术结果。
进行了15次CT扫描测试,夹板和设备均未松动。标准差(SD)的算术平均值在0.47毫米至0.70毫米之间。当使用该设备进行配准时,所研究的八个解剖结构的平均偏差范围从左眶下孔处的0.56毫米到右颞部的0.96毫米。与将钛螺钉固定在上颌牙槽的方法相比,使用新设备获得的目标配准误差(TRE)要小得多。使用该设备,成功完成了颧眶上颌复合体骨折的临床复位,配准差异小于0.5毫米。
通过成功解决图像引导手术的两个关键问题,该设备可被认为是精确的,并且在辅助颅颌面外科手术方面可能有用。