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Robot-assisted Percutaneous Pedicle Screw Placement Using Three-dimensional Fluoroscopy

Wei Tian, Mingxing Fan, Yajun Liu

Year
2017
Citations
26

Abstract

Pedicle screw placement is an advanced posterior fixation technique that can provide patients with great biomechanical benefits. However, the morphology of the vertebrae is complex and it is very difficult to insert screws without penetrating the cortex. Thus, new techniques for improving the accuracy of pedicle screw placement and safety are required. Herein, we propose a novel surgical robot system for percutaneous pedicle insertion based on three-dimensional (3D) fluoroscopy and present the first case of robot-assisted minimally invasive fixation of thoracic vertebrae. A 28-year-old male fell from a height of 4 m; he experienced progressive pain of the lower back and could not stand or walk. There was no relevant prior medical history. On neurological examination, there was no paresthesia of the lower extremities, and all muscles had full motor strength (V/V). X-ray and computed tomography (CT) images demonstrated an L1 vertebral burst fracture without compression of the related vertebral canal. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a high signal change in the L1 vertebra. After approval by the ethics committee (JST-20150504) and obtaining informed consent from the patient, robot-assisted percutaneous pedicle screw fixation was performed on August 6, 2015. The patient was placed in prone position under general anesthesia, a patient tracker was placed on the T10 spinal process, and a set of images were obtained by intraoperative C-arm scan. Based on these images, the TiRobot system (co-designed by Beijing Jishuitan Hospital and TINAVI Medical Technologies Co., Ltd.) was autoregistered, and surgeons used the TiRobot planning system to plan the trajectories of six pedicle screws. The robot arm of the TiRobot system was covered with sterilized plastic and docked along the side of the operating table; the trajectories were then confirmed before movement of the robot arm was initiated. The robot arm with a guidance tube on its end was automatically moved to the entry point of each trajectory and held still. After checking the position with the optical tracking system, a 2 cm skin incision was made through the guidance tube, and the guidance wire for the screw was placed through the tube using a drill. The position of each guidance wire was verified by fluoroscopy. A total of six pedicle screws (J&J Depuy Viper) were placed into the vertebrae through guidance wires; screws 6.0 mm in diameter and 50 mm in length were used for T12 and L2, and screws 5.0 mm in diameter and 35 mm in length were used for L1. There were no intraoperative complications. Postoperatively, the patient maintained full strength of the extremities. CT images taken 4 days postoperatively showed no perforations or loosening of the screws [Figure 1]. The merging of postoperative CT images and trajectory planning images demonstrated that the deviation between the planned and actual trajectories was 0.70 ± 0.82 mm in the sagittal plane and 1.27 ± 1.08 mm in the axial plane.Figure 1: Postoperative computed tomography images demonstrated that there were no perforations or loosening of the screws.Spine surgeons always have two types of limitations: visual and manipulative. Insufficient vision and force control can cause severe problems during spine surgery. Various methods have been introduced to improve the accuracy and safety of pedicle screw placement.[1] The TiRobot system is a novel surgical robot system for pedicle screw insertion. It can be used for surgical planning based on intraoperative 3D fluoroscopy images, and the serial-structured mechanical arm then guides the surgeon to the exact planned trajectories for the screws.[2] The main aspect that caused deviation of screws in the present study was system error. System error is generated during the image reconstruction, image auto-registration, and optical tracking process. C-arm fluoroscopy was used to capture the image data, which can result in image distortion caused by electromagnetic fields generated f

Keywords

MedicinePercutaneousFluoroscopyFixation (population genetics)Magnetic resonance imagingRadiologyProne positionSurgery

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