| Literature DB >> 34984863 |
Carl Fisher1, James Harty2, Albert Yee3, Celina L Li1, Katarzyna Komolibus1, Konstantin Grygoryev1, Huihui Lu1, Ray Burke1, Brian C Wilson4, Stefan Andersson-Engels1,5.
Abstract
SIGNIFICANCE: Orthopedic surgery currently comprises over 1.5 million cases annually in the United States alone and is growing rapidly with aging populations. Emerging optical sensing techniques promise fewer side effects with new, more effective approaches aimed at improving patient outcomes following orthopedic surgery. AIM: The aim of this perspective paper is to outline potential applications where fiberoptic-based approaches can complement ongoing development of minimally invasive surgical procedures for use in orthopedic applications. APPROACH: Several procedures involving orthopedic and spinal surgery, along with the clinical challenge associated with each, are considered. The current and potential applications of optical sensing within these procedures are discussed and future opportunities, challenges, and competing technologies are presented for each surgical application.Entities:
Keywords: biophotonics; guidance; optics; orthopedics; surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34984863 PMCID: PMC8727454 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.27.1.010601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.758
Overview of different surgical instrument methods potentially utilizing optical guidance.
| Procedure | Surgical instrument methods |
|---|---|
| Total hip arthroplasty | Drilling, shaving, shaping |
| Total knee arthroplasty | Drilling, shaving, shaping |
| Shoulder fixation | Drilling |
| Lumbar decompression | Shaving, shaping |
| Pedicle screw placement | Drilling, screw insertion |
Fig. 1Concept of a “smart” optical drill for total hip arthroplasty.
Fig. 2Concept of an optics-enabled burr for laminectomy.
Fig. 3Implementation of two-wavelength DRS in a cranial perforator surgical drill bit to prevent plunging events during craniotomy. (a) Prototype of Stryker CD 4 drill with integrated DRS, (b) schematic of the integrated illumination and detection systems, (c) demonstration of successful stop of the drill in ex vivo (sheep) cranium using optical detection only, leaving thick bone shelf just before the dura, (d) flow chart of 530- and 850-nm reflectance data acquisition and processing to detect the brain-bone boundary, applying threshold and slope algorithms. (Adapted from Ref. 25.)
Reported approaches of optical integration into orthopedic procedures.
| Procedure | Clinical challenge | Typical guidance | Optical technique | Verification method | Detected structure | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cranial perforation | Penetrating into brain | Mechanically clutched burr | Diffuse reflectance | Bone/brain interface |
| |
| Intramedullary nailing | Breach and soft tissue damage | X-ray | Diffuse reflectance | Bone/muscle interface |
| |
| Pedicle screw placement | Lateral and medial breach | CT | Diffuse reflectance, photo-acoustics | Cortical/cancellous bone |
Reported methods to measure in vivo optical absorption and elastic scattering properties of human tissues.
| Method | Tissue type | Wavelength (nm) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spatially resolved reflectance measurements | Esophageal (normal, benign, malignant) | 630 |
|
| Brain and bladder | 420–450, 532, 635 |
| |
| Esophageal wall | 630 |
| |
| Skin and underlying tissues | 400–1050 |
| |
| Common nevi, dysplastic nevi, and malignant melanoma skin lesions | 483–917 |
| |
| Prostate | 732 |
| |
| Time-resolved reflectance measurements | Skin, subcutaneous fat and muscle | 830 |
|
| Bone | 760, 600–1200 | ||
| Spatial frequency domain imaging | Skin | 450–800, 950–1600 |
|
| Ovarian tissue | 730 |
| |
| Low-coherence enhanced backscattering spectroscopy | Duodenal mucosa | Tunable xenon lamp |
|
Drilling parameters and competing technologies.
| Procedure | Drill type | Speed (rpm) | Feed/shaving rate (mm/s) | Accuracy required (mm) | Estimated forward sensing required (mm) | Competing approaches | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auto stop | Surgeon cues | ||||||
| Hip arthroplasty | Orthopedic drill with flexible drill bit | Up to 75k | 4 to 5 | 0.5 | 1 | 2 | Safe zones |
| Shoulder fixation | Orthopedic drill with flexible drill bit | Up to 75k | 4 to 5 | 0.2 to 0.5 | 0.5 to 1 | 1.5 to 2 | Drill guides, safe zones |
| Pedicle screw | High speed drill with drill guide | Up to 90k | 4 to 5 | 0.5 to 1.0 | 1 to 1.5 | 2 to 3 | Navigation, CT guidance, fluoroscopic guidance |
| Laminectomy | High speed drill with flex-burr in some cases | Up to 90k | 1 to 2 | 0.1 to 0.3 | 0.25 to 0.75 | 1 to 1.5 | Endoscopic + microscopic imaging, robotic (open decompression |
Safe zones are prescribed areas of tissue where procedures can be performed with minimal risk due to the absence of neurovascular structures.
Open decompression refers to procedure via a full skin incision where pressure on the spinal cord is relieved by removing the entire posterior portion of the vertebrae (the lamina).