Home /Research /Computer aided robotic radiosurgery
SURGICAL

Computer aided robotic radiosurgery

Pantaleo Romanelli, Achim Schweikard, Alexander Schlaefer, John R. Adler

Year
2006
Citations
22

Abstract

Radiosurgery involves the precise delivery of sharply collimated high-energy beams of radiation to a distinct target volume along selected trajectories. Historically, accurate targeting required the application of a stereotactic frame, thus limiting the use of this procedure to single treatments of selected intracranial lesions. However, the scope of radiosurgery has undergone a remarkable broadening since the introduction of image-guided robotic radiosurgery. Recent developments in real-time image guidance provide an effective frameless alternative to conventional radiosurgery and allow both the treatment of lesions outside the skull and the possibility of performing hypofractionation. As a consequence, targets in the spine, chest and abdomen can now also be radiosurgically ablated with submillimetric precision. Meanwhile, the combination of image guidance, robotic beam delivery, and non-isocentric inverse planning can greatly enhance the conformality and homogeneity of radiosurgery. The aim of this article is to describe the technological basis of image-guided radiosurgery and provide a perspective on future developments. The current clinical usage of robotic radiosurgery will be reviewed with an emphasis on those applications that may represent a major shift in the therapeutic paradigm.

Keywords

RadiosurgeryComputer scienceMedical physicsCollimated lightArtificial intelligenceComputer visionRadiologyMedicinePhysicsRadiation therapy

Related papers

Browse all SURGICAL papers