Integration of multimodality imaging and surgical navigation in the management of patients with refractory epilepsy. A pilot study using a new minimally invasive reference and head-fixation system

Summary Objective To review the experience with a new system (VBH system) for minimally invasive frameless stereotactic guidance, acting as a common platform to provide multimodal image integration and surgical navigation in a consecutive series of 25 patients who underwent surgery for drug-resistan...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta neurochirurgica 2010-02, Vol.152 (2), p.365-378
Hauptverfasser: Ortler, M., Trinka, E., Dobesberger, J., Bauer, R., Unterhofer, C., Twerdy, K., Walser, G., Unterberger, I., Donnemiller, E., Gotwald, T., Widmann, G., Bale, R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary Objective To review the experience with a new system (VBH system) for minimally invasive frameless stereotactic guidance, acting as a common platform to provide multimodal image integration and surgical navigation in a consecutive series of 25 patients who underwent surgery for drug-resistant seizures. Methods The usefulness of the VBH system for integrating all images to produce one dataset and for intraoperative instrument guidance and navigation was judged semiquantitatively in a three-tiered scale (+, ++, +++). Seizure outcome was classified according to Engel. Results The presurgical evaluation extended over 21.2 months (mean). A total of 141 registrations of images were performed (mean 5.6 per patient, range: 2 to 16). In 19 (76%) of 25 patients structural data fused with functional data were used for the presurgical workup. Six patients proceeded directly to navigated resection. Nineteen patients (76%) underwent invasive recording, of whom 13 underwent resective surgery. In seven patients (28%) the combination of multimodal image fusion and intra-operative stereotactic guidance was judged “essential” (+++) to remove the epileptogenic zone. Integration of all images to form one dataset was “essential” (+++) for decision making in 15 and “helpful” (++) in 4 patients (overall 76% of patients). Intraoperative use of frameless neuronavigation was “essential” (+++) in ten and “helpful” (++) in all remaining patients. Eighty percent of the patients achieved satisfactory seizure outcome after 1 year. Conclusion The VBH system is a safe and effective non-invasive tool for repetitive imaging, multimodal image fusion and frameless stereotactic surgical navigation in candidates for epilepsy surgery.
ISSN:0001-6268
0942-0940
DOI:10.1007/s00701-009-0386-2