7 research outputs found

    A method for the assessment of time-varying brain shift during navigated epilepsy surgery

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    Image guidance is widely used in neurosurgery. Tracking systems (neuronavigators) allow registering the preoperative image space to the surgical space. The localization accuracy is influenced by technical and clinical factors, such as brain shift. This paper aims at providing quantitative measure of the time-varying brain shift during open epilepsy surgery, and at measuring the pattern of brain deformation with respect to three potentially meaningful parameters: craniotomy area, craniotomy orientation and gravity vector direction in the images reference frame

    Intraoperative Imaging Modalities and Compensation for Brain Shift in Tumor Resection Surgery

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    Intraoperative brain shift during neurosurgical procedures is a well-known phenomenon caused by gravity, tissue manipulation, tumor size, loss of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and use of medication. For the use of image-guided systems, this phenomenon greatly affects the accuracy of the guidance. During the last several decades, researchers have investigated how to overcome this problem. The purpose of this paper is to present a review of publications concerning different aspects of intraoperative brain shift especially in a tumor resection surgery such as intraoperative imaging systems, quantification, measurement, modeling, and registration techniques. Clinical experience of using intraoperative imaging modalities, details about registration, and modeling methods in connection with brain shift in tumor resection surgery are the focuses of this review. In total, 126 papers regarding this topic are analyzed in a comprehensive summary and are categorized according to fourteen criteria. The result of the categorization is presented in an interactive web tool. The consequences from the categorization and trends in the future are discussed at the end of this work

    A surface registration method for quantification of intraoperative brain deformations in image-guided neurosurgery.

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    International audienceIntraoperative brain deformations decrease accuracy in image-guided neurosurgery. Approaches to quantify these deformations based on 3-D reconstruction of cortectomy surfaces have been described and have shown promising results regarding the extrapolation to the whole brain volume using additional prior knowledge or sparse volume modalities. Quantification of brain deformations from surface measurement requires the registration of surfaces at different times along the surgical procedure, with different challenges according to the patient and surgical step. In this paper, we propose a new flexible surface registration approach for any textured point cloud computed by stereoscopic or laser range approach. This method includes three terms: the first term is related to image intensities, the second to Euclidean distance, and the third to anatomical landmarks automatically extracted and continuously tracked in the 2-D video flow. Performance evaluation was performed on both phantom and clinical cases. The global method, including textured point cloud reconstruction, had accuracy within 2 mm, which is the usual rigid registration error of neuronavigation systems before deformations. Its main advantage is to consider all the available data, including the microscope video flow with higher temporal resolution than previously published methods

    Enhancing Registration for Image-Guided Neurosurgery

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    Pharmacologically refractive temporal lobe epilepsy and malignant glioma brain tumours are examples of pathologies that are clinically managed through neurosurgical intervention. The aims of neurosurgery are, where possible, to perform a resection of the surgical target while minimising morbidity to critical structures in the vicinity of the resected brain area. Image-guidance technology aims to assist this task by displaying a model of brain anatomy to the surgical team, which may include an overlay of surgical planning information derived from preoperative scanning such as the segmented resection target and nearby critical brain structures. Accurate neuronavigation is hindered by brain shift, the complex and non-rigid deformation of the brain that arises during surgery, which invalidates assumed rigid geometric correspondence between the neuronavigation model and the true shifted positions of relevant brain areas. Imaging using an interventional MRI (iMRI) scanner in a next-generation operating room can serve as a reference for intraoperative updates of the neuronavigation. An established clinical image processing workflow for iMRI-based guidance involves the correction of relevant imaging artefacts and the estimation of deformation due to brain shift based on non-rigid registration. The present thesis introduces two refinements aimed at enhancing the accuracy and reliability of iMRI-based guidance. A method is presented for the correction of magnetic susceptibility artefacts, which affect diffusion and functional MRI datasets, based on simulating magnetic field variation in the head from structural iMRI scans. Next, a method is presented for estimating brain shift using discrete non-rigid registration and a novel local similarity measure equipped with an edge-preserving property which is shown to improve the accuracy of the estimated deformation in the vicinity of the resected area for a number of cases of surgery performed for the management of temporal lobe epilepsy and glioma
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