| Literature DB >> 20975974 |
Paul Park1, Kevin T Foley, John A Cowan, Frank La Marca.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pedicle screw misplacement is relatively common, with reported rates ranging up to 42%. Although computer-assisted image guidance (CaIG) has been shown to improve accuracy in open spinal surgery, its use in minimally invasive procedures has not been as well evaluated. We present our technique and review the results from a cohort of patients who underwent minimally invasive lumbar pedicle screw placement utilizing the O-arm imaging unit in conjunction with the StealthStation Treon System.Entities:
Keywords: Image-guided surgery; O-arm; minimally invasive procedures; pedicle screw
Year: 2010 PMID: 20975974 PMCID: PMC2958329 DOI: 10.4103/2152-7806.68705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Neurol Int ISSN: 2152-7806
Demographics, diagnosis, and surgical procedures in patients receiving minimally invasive pedicle screw placement
| Number of patients | 11 |
| Mean age (years) | 44.0 (range 19–62) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 7 (63.6%) |
| Female | 4 (36.4%) |
| Diagnosis | |
| Degenerative disk disease | 3 (27.3%) |
| Degenerative spondylolisthesis | 2 (18.2%) |
| Isthmic spondylolisthesis | 4 (36.3%) |
| Degenerative scoliosis and spondylolisthesis | 1 (9.1%) |
| Idiopathic scoliosis | 1 (9.1%) |
| Procedure | |
| L4–5 MI-TLIF | 6 (54.5%) |
| L5–S1 MI-TLIF | 3 (27.3%) |
| MI L2–5 fixation, mini-open laminectomy | 1 (9.1%) |
| L1–L4 MI-TLIF, open thoracic osteotomies/fixation | 1 (9.1%) |
MI-TLIF = minimally invasive transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion
Figure 1Typical patient positioning with the O-arm in the “parked” position
Figure 2Diagram showing the technique for K-wire insertion through pedicle, using LDG with reference arc positioned toward the StealthStation camera at the foot of the operating room table
Figure 3Typical image from StealthStation during image guidance showing trajectory views of LDG
Figure 4Axial postoperative CT showing medial breach of L1 pedicle. Note the significant rotational component to the patient’s scoliosis
Figure 5Axial image from the O-arm showing adequate positioning of pedicle screws
Comparison of image guidance options for pedicle screw placement
| Fluoroscopy-assisted | Preoperative CT-based CaIG | Intraoperative Iso-C-based CaIG | Intraoperative O-arm-based CaIG | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantages | ↓Time | ↑Accuracy | ↑Accuracy | ↑Accuracy |
| ↓Cost | ↓Surgeon radiation exposure | ↓Surgeon radiation exposure | ↓Surgeon radiation exposure | |
| ↓Time (versus preoperative CT- based CaIG) | ↓Time (versus preoperative CT-based CaIG) | |||
| Can acquire intraoperative multi- planar images | Can acquire intraoperative multi-planar images | |||
| Can act as a fluoroscope | Can act as a fluoroscope | |||
| ↑Image quality (versus Iso-C-based CaIG) | ||||
| ↑Field of view (more spinal segments can be imaged) | ||||
| Robotic re-positioning to preprogrammed fluoroscopic views | ||||
| Disadvantages | ↓Accuracy | ↑Cost | ↑↑Cost | ↑↑↑Cost |
| ↑Surgeon radiation exposure | ↑Time (surgeon- derived registration) | Ergonomics (O-arm is larger than a fluoroscope or Iso-C) |
CaIG = computer-assisted image guidance; ↑ Increased ↓ decreased;
Further studies required to definitively confirm accuracy
Purported advantages of the O-arm imaging unit