Nikhil Sharma, Regan M Shanahan, Shovan Bhatia, Michael R Kann, Anthony Tang, Samuel Adida, Nicolas M Kass, Lucille Cheng, Fritz Steuer, Jeffrey R Head, Michael Raver, Stephen P Canton, Arka N Mallela, Jacob Biehl, Constantinos G Hadjipanayis, Edward G Andrews
{"title":"Calvarial Biopsy Using Augmented Reality Technology: A Case Report and Technical Note.","authors":"Nikhil Sharma, Regan M Shanahan, Shovan Bhatia, Michael R Kann, Anthony Tang, Samuel Adida, Nicolas M Kass, Lucille Cheng, Fritz Steuer, Jeffrey R Head, Michael Raver, Stephen P Canton, Arka N Mallela, Jacob Biehl, Constantinos G Hadjipanayis, Edward G Andrews","doi":"10.1055/s-0045-1809048","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Calvarial lesions are uncommonly encountered and are often a slow and progressive process. Biopsies of calvarial lesions can be uniquely challenging due to its proximity to critical structures. Augmented reality (AR) offers a potential alternative to computed tomography guidance that reduces radiation exposure and provides hands-free intraoperative guidance through complex and challenging surgical approaches. The patient is an 86-year-old female with significant past medical history of coronary heart disease. The patient underwent imaging which demonstrated a left parietal lytic skull lesion with extracranial extension. Using Surgical AR (Medivis, New York, New York, United States), a trajectory was planned centered on the lesion. Surgical AR was registered using point-to-point registration reliant on four anatomic fiducials. We used a ground truth, which is a bi-faced adhesive tag that measures 2 cm × 1 cm, with a QR code on each side that the Surgical AR system recognizes. This ground truth was placed on the patient's forehead, which linked to the registered holographic overlay. A small incision was made and after removal of a small portion of the overlying skull, multiple pieces of the lytic skull lesion were sampled. A specimen was obtained for frozen sectioning. Intra-operative pathology was consistent with metastatic carcinoma. Total surgical time was 35 minutes from incision to closure. The frameless AR navigation system successfully allowed accurate location, visualization, and biopsy of a calvarial lesion that had minimal surface landmarks. More so, this was completed without obscuring the surgical field or requiring time-consuming setup or registration.</p>","PeriodicalId":94300,"journal":{"name":"Asian journal of neurosurgery","volume":"20 3","pages":"631-635"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12370352/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Asian journal of neurosurgery","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0045-1809048","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2025/9/1 0:00:00","PubModel":"eCollection","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Calvarial lesions are uncommonly encountered and are often a slow and progressive process. Biopsies of calvarial lesions can be uniquely challenging due to its proximity to critical structures. Augmented reality (AR) offers a potential alternative to computed tomography guidance that reduces radiation exposure and provides hands-free intraoperative guidance through complex and challenging surgical approaches. The patient is an 86-year-old female with significant past medical history of coronary heart disease. The patient underwent imaging which demonstrated a left parietal lytic skull lesion with extracranial extension. Using Surgical AR (Medivis, New York, New York, United States), a trajectory was planned centered on the lesion. Surgical AR was registered using point-to-point registration reliant on four anatomic fiducials. We used a ground truth, which is a bi-faced adhesive tag that measures 2 cm × 1 cm, with a QR code on each side that the Surgical AR system recognizes. This ground truth was placed on the patient's forehead, which linked to the registered holographic overlay. A small incision was made and after removal of a small portion of the overlying skull, multiple pieces of the lytic skull lesion were sampled. A specimen was obtained for frozen sectioning. Intra-operative pathology was consistent with metastatic carcinoma. Total surgical time was 35 minutes from incision to closure. The frameless AR navigation system successfully allowed accurate location, visualization, and biopsy of a calvarial lesion that had minimal surface landmarks. More so, this was completed without obscuring the surgical field or requiring time-consuming setup or registration.
颅骨病变是罕见的,往往是一个缓慢和渐进的过程。头颅病变的活检可能具有独特的挑战性,因为它接近关键结构。增强现实(AR)提供了计算机断层扫描指导的潜在替代方案,可以减少辐射暴露,并通过复杂和具有挑战性的手术入路提供免手术中指导。患者86岁,女性,既往有明显冠心病病史。患者接受影像学检查显示左顶骨溶解性病变伴颅外延伸。使用Surgical AR (Medivis, New York, New York, United States),以病变为中心规划轨迹。手术AR采用点对点注册,依赖于四个解剖基准。我们使用了ground truth,这是一个双面的粘性标签,尺寸为2厘米× 1厘米,每一面都有外科AR系统识别的QR码。这个基本事实被放置在病人的额头上,它与注册的全息覆盖相连接。做一个小切口,切除一小部分覆盖的颅骨后,对颅骨病变的多个碎片进行取样。取标本进行冷冻切片。术中病理符合转移性癌。手术时间从切口到闭合为35分钟。无框AR导航系统成功地实现了对具有最小表面标志的颅骨病变的精确定位、可视化和活检。更重要的是,这是在没有遮挡手术视野或需要耗时的设置或注册的情况下完成的。