The clinical application of neuro-robot in the resection of epileptic foci: a novel method assisting epilepsy surgery
- PMID: 37308790
- DOI: 10.1007/s11701-023-01615-w
The clinical application of neuro-robot in the resection of epileptic foci: a novel method assisting epilepsy surgery
Abstract
During surgery for foci-related epilepsy, neurosurgeons face significant difficulties in identifying and resecting MRI-negative or deep-seated epileptic foci. Here, we present a neuro-robotic navigation system that is specifically designed for resection of MRI negative epileptic foci. We recruited 52 epileptic patients, and randomly assigned them to treatment group with either neuro-robotic navigation or conventional neuronavigation system. For each patient, in the neuro-robotic navigation group, we integrated multimodality imaging including MRI and PET-CT into the robotic workstation and marked the boundary of foci from the fused image. During surgery, this boundary was delineated by the robotic laser device with high accuracy, guiding resection for the surgeon. For deeply seated foci, we exploited the neuro-robotic navigation system to localize the deepest point with biopsy needle insertion and methylene dye application to locate the boundary of the foci. Our results show that, compared with the conventional neuronavigation, the neuro-robotic navigation system performs equally well in MRI positive epilepsy patients (ENGEL I ratio: 71.4% vs 100%, p = 0.255) systems and show better performance in patients with MRI-negative focal cortical dysplasia (ENGEL I ratio: 88.2% vs 50%, p = 0.0439). At present, there are no documented neurosurgery robots with similar function and application in the field of epilepsy. Our research highlights the added value of using neuro-robotic navigation systems in resection surgery for epilepsy, particularly in cases that involve MRI-negative or deep-seated epileptic foci.
Keywords: Epilepsy surgery; Focal cortical dysplasia; MRI negative epilepsy; Multimodality image fusion; Neuro-robotic system.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag London Ltd., part of Springer Nature.
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- No. 61761166004/the National Natural Science Foundation of China
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- No. 2018-2Z-1076/the Capital Medical Development Scientific Research Project
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