Abstract

BACKGROUNDVirtual reality (VR) offers an interactive environment for visualizing the intimate three-dimensional (3D) relationship between a patient’s pathology and surrounding anatomy. The authors present a model for using personalized VR technology, applied across the neurosurgical treatment continuum from the initial consultation to preoperative surgical planning, then to intraoperative navigation, and finally to postoperative visits, for various tumor and vascular pathologies.OBSERVATIONSFive adult patients undergoing procedures for spinal cord cavernoma, clinoidal meningioma, anaplastic oligodendroglioma, giant aneurysm, and arteriovenous malformation were included. For each case, 360-degree VR (360°VR) environments developed using Surgical Theater were used for patient consultation, preoperative planning, and/or intraoperative 3D navigation. The custom 360°VR model was rendered from the patient’s preoperative imaging. For two cases, the plan changed after reviewing the patient’s 360°VR model from one based on conventional Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine imaging.LESSONSLive 360° visualization with Surgical Theater in conjunction with surgical navigation helped validate the decisions made intraoperatively. The 360°VR models provided visualization to better understand the lesion’s 3D anatomy, as well as to plan and execute the safest patient-specific approach, rather than a less detailed, more standardized one. In all cases, preoperative planning using the patient’s 360°VR model had a significant impact on the surgical approach.

Highlights

  • Virtual reality (VR) offers an interactive environment for visualizing the intimate three-dimensional (3D) relationship between a patient’s pathology and surrounding anatomy

  • Surgical Theater was used for preoperative planning and intraoperative occlusion of the two M2 branches exiting the recurrent aneurysm because conventional imaging did not clearly define the exiting M2 branches (Fig. 3N)

  • A 360-degree VR (360°VR) model rendered from her stereotactic Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and functional MRI (fMRI) clearly showed the spatial relationship of feeding branches from the left posterior cerebral artery, middle cerebral artery (MCA), and draining veins, largely into the vein of Galen complex, all with respect to the optic radiations, and the corticospinal tract (Fig. 4A–E)

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Summary

Introduction

Virtual reality (VR) offers an interactive environment for visualizing the intimate three-dimensional (3D) relationship between a patient’s pathology and surrounding anatomy. The Surgical Theater visualization platform provides a proven method of digitally rendering patient-specific 360-degree VR (360°VR) models that allow users to become immersed in the patient’s unique anatomy when integrated with a VR headset. Pathology, imaging for preoperative 360°VR model, and Surgical Theater use for each case

Results
Conclusion

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