Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9351961 | EMC - Rhumatologie-Orthopédie | 2005 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Imaging, sensing and computing technologies that are being introduced to aid in the planning and execution of surgical procedures on spine are providing orthopaedic surgeons with a powerful new set of tools for improving clinical accuracy, reliability and patient outcomes while reducing costs and operating times. Current computer assisted spine surgery systems typically include four steps. 1. A measurement process for collecting patient specific medical data: pre-operative images (CT, x-rays, MRI), intra-operative images (fluoroscopy, ultrasound images), intra-operative positions of tools or bones obtained using 3D localizers. 2. A registration process for aligning all images and data to the patient coordinate system using anatomical landmarks, bone surfaces digitized directly or with ultrasounds, x-rays. 3. A decision making process for generating a surgical plan on multi-modality information: interactive placement of tools or bones on images, monitoring of criteria (angles, positions, impingementâ¦.). 4. An action process for accurately achieving the goals specified in the plan: passive systems that display the position of tools or bones on images and data; semi-active systems that position drill or cutting guides; active robots. In the future, it is expected that computer assisted spine surgery systems will enable surgeons to measure the performances of surgical techniques accurately and consistently, which is a first step for optimization of surgery.
Keywords
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Authors
P. (Professeur des Universités, praticien hospitalier), J. (Praticien hospitalier), H. (Assistant hospitalo-universitaire), C. (Ingénieur de recherche, TIMC, IMAG, CNRS), J. (Directrice de recherche, TIMC, IMAG, CNRS), A. (Praticien hospitalier),