Abstract
Inadvertent injury to important anatomic structures is a significant risk in minimally invasive surgery (MIS) that potentially requires conversion to an open procedure, which results in increased morbidity and mortality. Surgeons operating minimal-invasively currently do not have an easy-to-use, real-time device to aid in intraoperative identification of important anatomic structures that underlie tissue planes. We demonstrate freehand diffuse optical spectroscopy (DOS) imaging for intraoperatively identifying major underlying veins and arteries. An applicator probe that can be affixed to and detached from an 8-mm laparoscopic instrument has been developed. The 10-mm DOS source-detector separation renders sampling of tissue heterogeneities a few millimeters deep. DOS spectra acquired consecutively during freehand movement of the applicator probe on the tissue surface are displayed as a temporal and spectral image to assist in spatially resolved identification of the underlying structures. Open surgery identifications of the vena cava and aorta underlying peritoneal fat of ∼4 mm in thickness using the applicator probe under room light were demonstrated repeatedly in multiple pigs in vivo.
Highlights
Inadvertent injury to important anatomic structures is a significant risk in minimally invasive surgery (MIS) that potentially requires conversion to an open procedure, which results in increased morbidity and mortality
All of these techniques may provide information similar to the finger-based palpation used in open surgery that could become sensitive for identifying arterial vessels; sensing the pulsation alone is inherently ineffective for identifying low- or nonpulsatile vessels such as veins, and for other key structures, including ureters, bile ducts, and intestines
We demonstrate a simple method of freehand diffuse optical spectroscopy imaging for intraoperatively identifying significant anatomic structures, including major veins and arteries underlying the plane of dissection for targeted applications in MIS
Summary
Inadvertent injury to important anatomic structures is a significant risk in minimally invasive surgery (MIS) that potentially requires conversion to an open procedure, which results in increased morbidity and mortality.
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