Literature DB >> 10853057

Stereotaxy, navigation and the temporal concatenation.

M L Apuzzo1, J C Chen.   

Abstract

Nautical and cerebral navigation share similar elements of functional need and similar developmental pathways. The need for orientation necessitates the development of appropriate concepts, and such concepts are dependent on technology for practical realization. Occasionally, a concept precedes technology in time and requires periods of delay for appropriate development. A temporal concatenation exists where time allows the additive as need, concept and technology ultimately provide an endpoint of elegant solution. Nautical navigation has proceeded through periods of dead reckoning and celestial navigation to satellite orientation with associated refinements of instrumentation and charts for guidance. Cerebral navigation has progressed from craniometric orientation and burr hole mounted guidance systems to simple rectolinear and arc-centered devices based on radiographs to guidance by complex anatomical and functional maps provided as an amalgam of modern imaging modes. These maps are now augmented by complex frame and frameless systems which allow not only precise orientation, but also point and volumetric action. These complex technical modalities required and developed in part from elements of maritime navigation that have been translated to cerebral navigation in a temporal concatenation. Copyright 2000 S. Karger AG, Basel

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10853057     DOI: 10.1159/000029704

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stereotact Funct Neurosurg        ISSN: 1011-6125            Impact factor:   1.875


  3 in total

Review 1.  Computer-aided navigation in neurosurgery.

Authors:  P Grunert; K Darabi; J Espinosa; R Filippi
Journal:  Neurosurg Rev       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 3.042

2.  Are Skin Fiducials Comparable to Bone Fiducials for Registration When Planning Navigation-assisted Musculoskeletal Tumor Resections in a Cadaveric Simulated Tumor Model?

Authors:  Rodolfo Zamora; Stephanie E Punt; Claudia Christman-Skieller; Cengiz Yildirim; John C Shapton; Ernest U Conrad
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2019-12       Impact factor: 4.176

3.  Use of neuronavigation and electrophysiology in surgery of subcortically located lesions in the sensorimotor strip.

Authors:  W Eisner; J Burtscher; R Bale; R Sweeney; F Koppelstätter; S Golaszewski; C Kolbitsch; K Twerdy
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 10.154

  3 in total

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