A new surgical path planning framework for neurosurgery

Background Despite using a variety of path‐finding algorithms that use tracts, the most significant advancement in this study is considering the values of all brain areas by doing atlas‐based segmentation for a more precise search. Our motivation comes from the literature’s shortcomings in designing...

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Published inThe international journal of medical robotics + computer assisted surgery Vol. 20; no. 1; pp. e2576 - n/a
Main Authors Kurt Pehlivanoğlu, Meltem, Ay, Eren Cem, Eker, Ayşe Gül, Albayrak, Nur Banu, Duru, Nevcihan, Mutluer, Ahmet Serdar, Dündar, Tolga Turan, Doğan, İhsan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hamilton Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.02.2024
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Summary:Background Despite using a variety of path‐finding algorithms that use tracts, the most significant advancement in this study is considering the values of all brain areas by doing atlas‐based segmentation for a more precise search. Our motivation comes from the literature’s shortcomings in designing and implementing path‐planning methods. Since planning paths with curvatures is a complex problem that requires considering many surgical and physiological constraints, most path‐planning strategies focus on straight paths. There is also a lack of studies that focus on the complete structure of the brain with the tracks, veins, and segmented areas. Instrument dependence is another inadequacy of the methods proposed in the literature. Aims The aim of this study is to design a new surgical path planning framework that helps to plan the surgical path independently of the instrument, considers the entire structure of the brain, and allows curvilinear surgical paths. Thus, neurosurgeons can generate patient‐specific possible optimal surgical pathways before the neurosurgical procedure. Materials & Methods The proposed framework includes different path‐finding algorithms (Dijkstra, A*, and their aggressive variants) that find optimal paths by taking the risk scores (surgeons assessed all the segmented regions, considering the extent of damage. In this evaluation, scores ranged from “0 to 10,” with the most critical areas receiving a score of “10,” while the least possible affected areas were assigned a score of "0") for sensitive brain areas into consideration. For the tract image processing the framework includes fractional anisotropy (FA), relative anisotropy (RA), spherical measure (SM), and linear measure (LM) methods. Results This is the first paper to handle tracts and atlas‐based segmentation of the human brain altogether under a framework for surgical path planning. The framework has a dynamic structure that gives the flexibility to add different path‐finding algorithms and generate different widths of surgical pathways. Moreover, surgeons can update the score table to guarantee minimally invasive surgery. The output file format of all the extracted surgical paths is NRRD, so it can be easily visualised, analysed, or processed over the third part software tools. Discussion In this study, we generated many possible surgical pathways then these pathways were evaluated by the surgeons the results were impressive because the framework could identify surgical pathways used in real‐world surgery that correspond to the standard pathways such as anterior transsylvian, trans sulcal, transgyral, and sub‐temporal. Conclusion This study proposes a new surgical path planning framework for neurosurgery. Moreover, in the future by adding/adopting different parameters (such as operation time, and short and long‐term complications after surgery) to the proposed framework, it would be possible to find new surgical pathways for difficult surgical conditions.
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ISSN:1478-5951
1478-596X
DOI:10.1002/rcs.2576