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A fluoroscopy-based planning and guidance software tool for minimally invasive hip refixation by cement injection
Authors:Daniel F. Malan  Stéfan J. van der Walt  Renata G. Raidou  Bas van den Berg  Berend C. Stoel  Charl P. Botha  Rob G. H. H. Nelissen  Edward R. Valstar
Affiliation:1.Department of Orthopaedics,Leiden University Medical Center,Leiden,The Netherlands;2.Department of Intelligent Systems,Delft University of Technology,Delft,The Netherlands;3.Division of Applied Mathematics,University of Stellenbosch,Stellenbosch,South Africa;4.Department of Radiology,Leiden University Medical Center,Leiden,The Netherlands;5.Department of Biomechanical Engineering,Delft University of Technology,Delft,The Netherlands;6.Department of Biomedical Engineering,Technische Universiteit Eindhoven,Eindhoven,The Netherlands;7.Department of Orthopaedics,J11-R,Leiden,The Netherlands
Abstract:

Purpose

In orthopaedics, minimally invasive injection of bone cement is an established technique. We present HipRFX, a software tool for planning and guiding a cement injection procedure for stabilizing a loosening hip prosthesis. HipRFX works by analysing a pre-operative CT and intraoperative C-arm fluoroscopic images.

Methods

HipRFX simulates the intraoperative fluoroscopic views that a surgeon would see on a display panel. Structures are rendered by modelling their X-ray attenuation. These are then compared to actual fluoroscopic images which allow cement volumes to be estimated. Five human cadaver legs were used to validate the software in conjunction with real percutaneous cement injection into artificially created periprothetic lesions.

Results

Based on intraoperatively obtained fluoroscopic images, our software was able to estimate the cement volume that reached the pre-operatively planned targets. The actual median target lesion volume was 3.58 ml (range 3.17–4.64 ml). The median error in computed cement filling, as a percentage of target volume, was 5.3 % (range 2.2–14.8 %). Cement filling was between 17.6 and 55.4 % (median 51.8 %).

Conclusions

As a proof of concept, HipRFX was capable of simulating intraoperative fluoroscopic C-arm images. Furthermore, it provided estimates of the fraction of injected cement deposited at its intended target location, as opposed to cement that leaked away. This level of knowledge is usually unavailable to the surgeon viewing a fluoroscopic image and may aid in evaluating the success of a percutaneous cement injection intervention.
Keywords:
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