Projects per year
Abstract
Purpose: Brain shift that occurs during neurosurgery disturbs the brain’s anatomy. Prediction of the brain shift is essential for accurate localisation of the surgical target. Biomechanical models have been envisaged as a possible tool for such predictions. In this study, we created a framework to automate the workflow for predicting intra-operative brain deformations. Methods: We created our framework by uniquely combining our meshless total Lagrangian explicit dynamics (MTLED) algorithm for computing soft tissue deformations, open-source software libraries and built-in functions within 3D Slicer, an open-source software package widely used for medical research. Our framework generates the biomechanical brain model from the pre-operative MRI, computes brain deformation using MTLED and outputs results in the form of predicted warped intra-operative MRI. Results: Our framework is used to solve three different neurosurgical brain shift scenarios: craniotomy, tumour resection and electrode placement. We evaluated our framework using nine patients. The average time to construct a patient-specific brain biomechanical model was 3 min, and that to compute deformations ranged from 13 to 23 min. We performed a qualitative evaluation by comparing our predicted intra-operative MRI with the actual intra-operative MRI. For quantitative evaluation, we computed Hausdorff distances between predicted and actual intra-operative ventricle surfaces. For patients with craniotomy and tumour resection, approximately 95% of the nodes on the ventricle surfaces are within two times the original in-plane resolution of the actual surface determined from the intra-operative MRI. Conclusion: Our framework provides a broader application of existing solution methods not only in research but also in clinics. We successfully demonstrated the application of our framework by predicting intra-operative deformations in nine patients undergoing neurosurgical procedures.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1925-1940 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery |
Volume | 18 |
Issue number | 10 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Oct 2023 |
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Brain-skull interface: discovering the missing piece of head biomechanics puzzle
Wittek, A. (Investigator 01), Miller, K. (Investigator 02), Yang, K. (Investigator 03) & Kikinis, R. (Investigator 04)
ARC Australian Research Council
25/01/23 → 24/01/26
Project: Research
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Towards better neuronavigation in epilepsy surgery: pre-operative MRI to intra-operative CT registration
Miller, K. (Investigator 01), Warfield, S. (Investigator 02), Joldes, G. (Investigator 03) & Wittek, A. (Investigator 04)
NHMRC National Health and Medical Research Council
1/01/19 → 31/12/22
Project: Research
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Resection-induced brain shift estimation: biomechanics-based approach
Miller, K. (Investigator 01), Knuckey, N. (Investigator 02), Nabavi, A. (Investigator 03), Joldes, G. (Investigator 04), Wittek, A. (Investigator 05) & Kikinis, R. (Investigator 06)
NHMRC National Health and Medical Research Council
1/01/18 → 31/12/21
Project: Research