Chen Xiaozhao, Hu Jinfeng, Mao Baolin, Yan Chongnan, K. Yan
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A method of lumbar pedicle screw placement optimization applied to guidance techniques
Abstract Pedicle screws are an established method for spinal segmental fixation. To pursue high accuracy and minimally invasive, various different guidance techniques have developed. However, the preoperative screw position plans are determined by manual selection which demands complex operations and costs a lot of time. In addition, the current paths planning only consider the position, without taking the postoperative screws retention into consideration. In order to solve the problems, a new method was proposed to plan the lumbar pedicle screw placement automatically. Firstly, identify pedicle area and establish initial path based on the current vertebrae segmentation technology. After that, optimize path via the improved boundary limited Nelder–Mead simplex algorithm, and get the highest firmness path in theory. We considered that both the accuracy of position and the firmness of postoperative screws, achieved a fully automatic optimal path planning, which can effectively assist operators, improve the firmness of screw placement.
期刊介绍:
omputer Assisted Surgery aims to improve patient care by advancing the utilization of computers during treatment; to evaluate the benefits and risks associated with the integration of advanced digital technologies into surgical practice; to disseminate clinical and basic research relevant to stereotactic surgery, minimal access surgery, endoscopy, and surgical robotics; to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration between engineers and physicians in developing new concepts and applications; to educate clinicians about the principles and techniques of computer assisted surgery and therapeutics; and to serve the international scientific community as a medium for the transfer of new information relating to theory, research, and practice in biomedical imaging and the surgical specialties.
The scope of Computer Assisted Surgery encompasses all fields within surgery, as well as biomedical imaging and instrumentation, and digital technology employed as an adjunct to imaging in diagnosis, therapeutics, and surgery. Topics featured include frameless as well as conventional stereotactic procedures, surgery guided by intraoperative ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging, image guided focused irradiation, robotic surgery, and any therapeutic interventions performed with the use of digital imaging technology.