| Literature DB >> 31316995 |
Dimitrios Chytas1, Michael-Alexander Malahias2, Vasileios S Nikolaou1.
Abstract
Augmented reality (AR) comprises special hardware and software, which is used in order to offer computer-processed imaging data to the surgeon in real time, so that real-life objects are combined with computer-generated images. AR technology has recently gained increasing interest in the surgical practice. Preclinical research has provided substantial evidence that AR might be a useful tool for intra-operative guidance and decision-making. AR has been applied to a wide spectrum of orthopedic procedures, such as tumor resection, fracture fixation, arthroscopy, and component's alignment in total joint arthroplasty. The present study aimed to summarize the current state of the application of AR in orthopedics, in preclinical and clinical level, providing future directions and perspectives concerning potential further benefits from this technology.Entities:
Keywords: augmented reality; current status; future; orthopedics; perspective
Year: 2019 PMID: 31316995 PMCID: PMC6610425 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2019.00038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1(Left) Picture showing a surgeon from Karolinska hospital in Stockholm using a hybrid operating room with an augmented reality system integrated with the robotic C-arm. (Right) The surgeon is seeing at the screen the video streaming of his surgery with a blue line indicating the direction of his instruments that he is navigating into the pedicle (Photo courtesy of Dr. Rami Nachabe).
Figure 2A diagram which depicts the use of a camera-augmented C-arm for distal interlocking of an intramedullary nail.
Figure 3Examples of intraoperative image in wrist surgery and distal locking intramedullary nailing (Photos courtesy of Prof. Pascal Fallavolitta, Ottava, Canada).
Clinical studies about augmented reality in orthopedics.
| Von der Heide et al. ( | Several procedures performed with fluoroscopy (plate, nail and screw osteosynthesis, implant removal) | Camera-augmented C-arm | The X-ray shots were diminished to approximately a half with the use of AR. The time of surgery remained similar to that of traditional C-arms |
| Ponce et al. ( | Shoulder arthroscopy | VIP | AR technology was a useful teaching tool for orthopedic residents, it was safe and was characterized by comparable operative times to conventional methods |
| Ponce et al. ( | Total shoulder arthroplasty | VIP combined with wearable computing device | Satisfactory postoperative range of motion and pain reduction in a patient who underwent total shoulder arthroplasty |
| Ogawa et al. ( | Total hip arthroplasty | AR-HIP | AR was significantly more accurate than the goniometer regarding the intraoperative measurement of the angles of acetabular cup fixation |
| Shen et al. ( | Pelvic and acetabular fractures | A virtual fracture reduction system and an AR-aided templating system, comprising a personal computer and a video camera | AR-based reconstruction plate may lead to reduction of the operative time, surgical invasiveness and complexity |
| Elmi-Terander et al. ( | Spine surgery | AR surgical navigation system, based on video input from four cameras mounted into the frame of a C-arm detector | AR-based surgical navigation could offer acceptable time of navigation and high accuracy of placement of pedicle screws |
| Wu et al. (2014) | Spine surgery | ARCASS | The AR-based system was characterized by feasibility, accuracy, reduced operative time and radiation dose to patients |
| Abe et al. ( | Spine surgery | VIPAR | The AR-based system offered a remarkable help to surgeons to find the ideal needle trajectory and insertion point when performing percutaneous vertebroplasty |
| Kosterhon et al. ( | Spine surgery | A system which preoperatively creates virtual resection planes and volumes for spinal osteotomies and exports three-dimensional operative plans to a navigation system controlling intraoperative visualization via a surgical microscope's head-up display | Increased accuracy and safety in a patient who underwent surgery for congenital hemivertebra of the thoracolumbar spine |
AR, augmented reality; VIP, Virtual Interactive Presence (merges in real time two video streams that capture separate and remote fields into a common task field, thus permitting real-time interaction between remote surgeons in that field); AR-HIP, a system which enables the surgeon to view an acetabular cup image superimposed on the real surgical field through the display of a smartphone, which shows anteversion angles and inclination of the acetabular cup; ARCASS, Augmented Reality Computer Assisted Spine Surgery (projects a preoperative three-dimensional model of the patient onto the intraoperative scene, using a camera and a projector); VIPAR, virtual protractor with augmented reality (comprises a head-mount display with a tracking camera and a marker sheet to visualize a needle trajectory in three-dimensional space during percutaneous vertebroplasty).