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An integrated system for planning, navigation and robotic assistance for skull base surgery

✍ Scribed by Tian Xia; Clint Baird; George Jallo; Kathryn Hayes; Nobuyuki Nakajima; Nobuhiko Hata; Peter Kazanzides


Publisher
Wiley (Robotic Publications)
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
364 KB
Volume
4
Category
Article
ISSN
1478-5951

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

We developed an image‐guided robot system to provide mechanical assistance for skull base drilling, which is performed to gain access for some neurosurgical interventions, such as tumour resection. The motivation for introducing this robot was to improve safety by preventing the surgeon from accidentally damaging critical neurovascular structures during the drilling procedure.

Methods

We integrated a Stealthstation^®^ navigation system, a NeuroMate^®^ robotic arm with a six‐degree‐of‐freedom force sensor, and the 3D Slicer visualization software to allow the robotic arm to be used in a navigated, cooperatively‐controlled fashion by the surgeon. We employed virtual fixtures to constrain the motion of the robot‐held cutting tool, so that it remained in the safe zone that was defined on a preoperative CT scan.

Results

We performed experiments on both foam skull and cadaver heads. The results for foam blocks cut using different registrations yielded an average placement error of 0.6 mm and an average dimensional error of 0.6 mm. We drilled the posterior porus acusticus in three cadaver heads and concluded that the robot‐assisted procedure is clinically feasible and provides some ergonomic benefits, such as stabilizing the drill. We obtained postoperative CT scans of the cadaver heads to assess the accuracy and found that some bone outside the virtual fixture boundary was cut. The typical overcut was 1–2 mm, with a maximum overcut of about 3 mm.

Conclusions

The image‐guided cooperatively‐controlled robot system can improve the safety and ergonomics of skull base drilling by stabilizing the drill and enforcing virtual fixtures to protect critical neurovascular structures. The next step is to improve the accuracy so that the overcut can be reduced to a more clinically acceptable value of about 1 mm. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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