| Literature DB >> 32257570 |
Enrique de Font-Réaulx1, Ramón López López2, Luis Guillermo Díaz López3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Safety and efficacy are irrebuttable goals in neurosurgery.Entities:
Keywords: Brain shift; Brain temperature; Cavernoma; Eloquent area; Infrared thermography mapping; Neuronavigation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32257570 PMCID: PMC7110428 DOI: 10.25259/SNI_435_2019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Neurol Int ISSN: 2152-7806
Figure 1:Panoramic thermographic photograph of the craniotomy, where the left frontal, parietal, and occipital lobes are exposed. The black arrow shows the hottest point of the exposed brain cortex, located in the supramarginal gyrus. The blue arrow shows the intraparietal sulcus.
ITM recordings using the sterile acetate grid with coordinates. The hottest point (coordinate B1) was in the supramarginal gyrus. Each color has an interval of 2.5°C.
Figure 2:Neuronavigation location of the target.
Figure 3:(a) Neuronavigation system localization of the target (blue circle); (b) Grid placement for the pointer thermographic recording where the yellow circle represents the hottest thermographic recording [coordinate B1 of Table 1] over the supramarginal gyrus; (c) A trans- sulcal access was performed in the point where the neuronavigation system located the lesion (dotted blue circle). The yellow circle represents the real subcortical localization of the cavernous angioma. The proximity of the hottest thermographic recording to the real localization of the lesion is evident.