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General Orthopaedics

EVALUATION OF A NEW COMPUTER-ASSISTED SURGERY SYSTEM IN SCAPHOID BONE FRACTURES – AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY

The International Society for Computer Assisted Orthopaedic Surgery (CAOS)



Abstract

Computer assisted surgery (CAS) is used in trauma surgery to reduce radiation and improve accuracy but it is time consuming. Some trials for navigation in small bone fractures were made, but they are still experimental. One major problem is the fixation of the dynamic reference base for navigation. We evaluated the benefit of a new image based guidance-system (Surgix®, Tel Aviv, Israel) for fracture treatment in scaphoid bones compared to the conventional method without navigation. The system consists of a workstation and surgical devices with embedded radio opaque markers. These markers as well as the object of interest must be on the same C-arm shot. If a tool is detected in an image by the attached workstation additional information such as trajectories are displayed in the original fluoroscopic image to serve the surgeon as aiming device. The system needs no referencing and no change of the workflow.

For this study 20 synthetic hand models (Synbone®, Malans, Switzerland) were randomised in two groups. Aim of this study was a central guide-wire placement in the scaphoid bone, which was blindly measured by using postoperative CT-scans. Significant distinctions related to the duration of surgery, emission of radiation, radiation dose, and trials of guide-wire positioning were observed.

By using the system the surgery duration was with 50 % shortened (p = 0.0054) compared to the conventional group. One reason might be the significant reduction of trials to achieve a central guide-wire placement in the bone (p = 0.0032). Consequently the radiation exposure for the surgeon and the patient could be shortened by reduction of radiation emission (p = 0.0014) and radiation dose (p = 0.0019).

By using the imaged based guidance system a reduction of surgery duration, radiation exposure for the patient and the surgeon can be achieved. By a reduced number of trials for achieving a central guide-wire position the risk of weakening the bone structure can be minimised as well by using the system. The system seems helpful where navigation is not applicable up to now. The surgical workflow does not have to be chanced.