Articles: neuronavigation.
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The almost age-old neuroendoscopy (NE) and neuronavigation (NN) in its twenties independently and indisputably have proved their high value as neurosurgical armamentarium and became even indispensable in some pathologies. However, nowadays the effectiveness of their simultaneous and combined application still is a matter of debate. The purpose of our pilot international, questionnaire-based survey was to assess the position of the opinion leaders in the field of neuroendoscopy worldwide toward the neuronavigational neuroendoscopy (NNNE). ⋯ NNNE represents a valuable operative technique with excellent future prospects. NNNE extends the range of neuroendoscopic procedures, transforming some number of patients from "nonoperable" neuroendoscopically to suitable for neuroendoscopy.
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The use of transpedicular screw fixation has been widely accepted for the treatment of degenerative and traumatic pathology of the lumbar spine. Complications of spinal instrumentation can be serious. Screw misplacement can result in unintended durotomy, nerve root and/or cauda equina injury. In comparison to fluoroscopy-assisted screw placement, computer-assisted image guidance has been shown to achieve overall higher rates of accuracy. The O-arm is able to obtain computed tomography (CT)-type images with multiplanar reconstruction. In this study we evaluated a cohort of patients who underwent posterior lumbar fusion with pedicle screws utilizing the O-arm imaging system. ⋯ The use of intraoperative O-arm imaging system with computer-assisted navigation significantly increases the surgical accuracy and safety of pedicle screw placement in lumbar fusion surgery.
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Case Reports Clinical Trial
Image-guided neurosurgery with 3-dimensional multimodal imaging data on a stereoscopic monitor.
In the past 2 decades, intraoperative navigation technology has changed preoperative and intraoperative strategies and methodology tremendously. ⋯ We consider navigating primarily with stereoscopic, 3-D multimodality data an improvement over navigating with image planes, and we believe that this technology enables a more intuitive intraoperative interpretation of the displayed navigational information and hence an easier surgical implementation of the preoperative plan.