4.7 Article

Exploring Deep Cervical Compartments in Head and Neck Surgical Oncology through Augmented Reality Vision: A Proof of Concept

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12206650

Keywords

head and neck cancer; virtual planning; augmented reality; neck disease; image-guided surgery

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Virtual surgical planning allows for precise preoperative assessment and customized treatment plans. In neck surgery, augmented reality can merge virtual planning with the surgical field in real time, aiding surgeons in locating and preserving vital structures.
Background: Virtual surgical planning allows surgeons to meticulously define surgical procedures by creating a digital replica of patients' anatomy. This enables precise preoperative assessment, facilitating the selection of optimal surgical approaches and the customization of treatment plans. In neck surgery, virtual planning has been significantly underreported compared to craniofacial surgery, due to a multitude of factors, including the predominance of soft tissues, the unavailability of intraoperative navigation and the complexity of segmenting such areas. Augmented reality represents the most innovative approach to translate virtual planning for real patients, as it merges the digital world with the surgical field in real time. Surgeons can access patient-specific data directly within their field of view, through dedicated visors. In head and neck surgical oncology, augmented reality systems overlay critical anatomical information onto the surgeon's visual field. This aids in locating and preserving vital structures, such as nerves and blood vessels, during complex procedures. In this paper, the authors examine a series of patients undergoing complex neck surgical oncology procedures with prior virtual surgical planning analysis. For each patient, the surgical plan was imported in Hololens headset to allow for intraoperative augmented reality visualization. The authors discuss the results of this preliminary investigation, tracing the conceptual framework for an increasing AR implementation in complex head and neck surgical oncology procedures.

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