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Computer-aided Technology Helps Surgeons �see Through� a Limb During Surgery

by Anjali Aryamvally on February 1, 2018 at 5:48 PM
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Highlights:

Augmented reality (AR) in operation theaters allows surgeons to find blood vessels under the skin accurately and quickly by overlaying scan images onto the patient, shows new study carried out by a team at Imperial College London published in European Radiology Experimental. AR allows the surgeon to see through the patient's skin to study the underlying anatomy without making a single incision, thus bringing preoperative computed tomography (CT) angiography (CTA) information imaging to life.


Wikipedia states that "The primary value of Augmented reality is that it brings components of the digital world into a person's perception of the real world, and does so not as a simple display of data, but through the integration of immersive sensations that are perceived as natural parts of an environment."

‘Augmented reality, a novel technology can help in �seeing through� a patient�s limb during operation and thus help surgeons improve outcome of similar surgeries.’

Using Microsoft's HoloLens headsets while operating on patients undergoing reconstructive lower limb surgery helps surgeons locate and reconnect key blood vessels during surgery, which could improve outcomes for patients. Reconstructive surgery is mostly carried out on faces after trauma and to reconstruct the head and neck after cancer. It is performed by plastic surgeons and surgeons who operate on the head, neck, and face aiming to improve their form and function.

"We are one of the first groups in the world to use the HoloLens successfully in the operating theatre," said Dr Philip Pratt, a Research Fellow in the Department of Surgery Cancer and lead author of the study, "Through this initial series of patient cases we have shown that the technology is practical, and that it can provide a benefit to the surgical team. With the HoloLens, you look at the leg and essentially see inside of it. You see the bones, the course of the blood vessels, and can identify exactly where the targets are located."

Building the model

Patients undergoing surgery are first scanned. The CT of their limbs maps the structure of the limb including the position of the bones and blood vessels. The scanned images are then segmented into bone, muscle, fatty tissue and blood vessels by a radiologist. These are then loaded onto a software to generate a 3-dimensional model. Once a model is generated, the data was fed into a specially designed software that provides images for the HoloLens headset. When the surgeon looks at the patient's limb through the HoloLens, the generated model overlays the actual limb giving the surgeon the precise location of the internal complexity. If needed, the models may be manipulated through hand gestures to make any fine adjustments and correctly line up the model with surgical landmarks on the patient's limbs, such as the knee joint or ankle bone.

Dr. Dimitri Amiras, a consultant radiologist at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, said, "Now, using the HoloLens, we can identify where the blood vessels are in 3D space and use virtual 3D arrows to guide the surgeon. Currently, data preparation is a time-consuming process, but in the future, much of this could be automated, with the consultant radiologist checking the accuracy of the model against the original scan. I think this is a great example of what can be achieved in an Academic Health Science Centre."

Limitations

Reference:

  1. Pratt, P. et al. Through the HoloLens� looking glass: augmented reality for extremity reconstruction surgery using 3D vascular models with perforating vessels. European Radiology Experimental2, (2018).


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