Roessler K, Ungersboeck K, Aichholzer M, Dietrich W, Goerzer H, Matula C, Czech T, Koos W T
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Vienna Medical School, Austria.
Surg Neurol. 1998 Mar;49(3):282-8; discussion 288-9. doi: 10.1016/s0090-3019(97)00421-7.
The Zeiss MKM System is a recently developed computerized operating microscope for image-guided neurosurgery. The clinical advantages, reliability, accuracy, and limitations of this technique were investigated.
Since February 1995, 78 consecutive frameless stereotactic image-guided procedures were performed in 73 patients (30 males, 43 females; mean age, 46.9 years; range, 16-77 years) for tumor surgery (50/64.1%), cavernoma removal (16/20.5%), and functional procedures (12/15.4%). Skin markers (74 cases) or bone markers (4 cases) and a standard imaging protocol (2-mm cranial computed tomography (CCT) in 59 cases/1.5-mm magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 19 cases) were used.
The main advantages were pre-operative skin incision, craniotomy and corticotomy planning, and determination of lesion boundaries. Useful registration and system reliability were noted in 97% (76/78) of the procedures. A significant improvement in registration accuracy was observed over the test period from a mean of 4.8 mm (SD = 3.36; Cases 1-25) to a mean of 2.2 mm (SD = 0.86; Cases 26-78). This resulted in an improvement in application accuracy from <5 mm in 71% (Cases 1-25) to <2 mm in 95% (Cases 26-78) of cases, and the accuracy led to successful localization of the lesion in every case. Accuracy was reliable at the beginning of every procedure, but degraded to values >5 mm by the end of the procedure in 29% (22/78) of cases. MRI cases achieved higher application accuracy values (2.1 mm mean) than CT cases (3.7 mm mean).
The system offers a reliable alternative to frame-assisted stereotactic craniotomies in lesion targeting, but would need an intraoperative image update for resection guidance.