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Background: Stereotactic neurosurgical brain biopsies are afflicted with risks of inconclusive results and hemorrhage. Such complications can necessitate repeated trajectories and prolong surgical time.
Objective: To develop and introduce a 1-insertion stereotactic biopsy kit with direct intraoperative optical feedback and to evaluate its applicability in 3 clinical cases.
Methods: An in-house forward-looking probe with optical fibers was designed to fit the outer cannula of a side-cutting biopsy kit. A small aperture was made at the tip of the outer cannula and the edges aligned with the optical probe inside. Stereotactic biopsies were performed using the Leksell Stereotactic System. Optical signals were measured in millimeter steps along the preplanned trajectory during the insertion. At the region with the highest 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA)-induced fluorescence, the probe was replaced by the inner cannula, and tissue samples were taken. The waiting time for pathology diagnosis was noted.
Results: Measurements took 5 to 10 minutes, and the surgeon received direct visual feedback of intraoperative 5-ALA fluorescence, microcirculation, and tissue gray-whiteness. The 5-ALA fluorescence corroborated with the pathological findings which had waiting times of 45, 50, and 75 minutes. Because only 1 trajectory was required and the patient could be prepared for the end of surgery immediately after sampling, this shortened the total surgical time.
Conclusion: A 1-insertion stereotactic biopsy procedure with real-time optical guidance has been presented and successfully evaluated in 3 clinical cases. The method can be modified for frameless navigation and thus has great potential to improve safety and diagnostic yield for both frameless and frame-based neurosurgical biopsy procedures.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10313274 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/ons.0000000000000722 | DOI Listing |
Oper Neurosurg
August 2023
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Background: Stereotactic neurosurgical brain biopsies are afflicted with risks of inconclusive results and hemorrhage. Such complications can necessitate repeated trajectories and prolong surgical time.
Objective: To develop and introduce a 1-insertion stereotactic biopsy kit with direct intraoperative optical feedback and to evaluate its applicability in 3 clinical cases.
Mayo Clin Proc
October 1993
Department of Neurologic Surgery, Mayo Clinic Rochester, Minnesota 55905.
During the 7-year period between June 1985 and May 1992, 34 patients with pineal lesions underwent 66 stereotactic procedures (37 biopsies, 19 third ventriculostomies, 6 cyst aspirations, 3 instillations of 32P into cysts, and 1 insertion of an Ommaya reservoir into a cyst) at the Mayo Clinic. Nine patients subsequently also underwent 10 open resections of lesions of the pineal region. In the 34 study patients, the pathologic entities were 9 gliomas (5 astrocytomas, 2 ependymomas, and 2 oligodendrogliomas), 9 germ cell tumors (7 germinomas, 1 entodermal sinus tumor, and 1 malignant teratoma), 8 pineal parenchymal tumors (3 pinealomas, 3 pinealoblastomas, 1 mixed pinealoma-pinealoblastoma, and 1 intermediate differentiation pineal tumor), 4 other malignant tumors (2 undifferentiated carcinomas, 1 malignant melanoma, and 1 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma), 2 meningiomas, and 2 nonneoplastic lesions (1 glial cyst and 1 inflammatory lesion).
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