4.5 Article

Virtual Reality in Preoperative Planning of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis Surgery Using Google Cardboard

Journal

NEUROSPINE
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 199-205

Publisher

KOREAN SPINAL NEUROSURGERY SOC
DOI: 10.14245/ns.2040574.287

Keywords

Virtual reality; Spine surgery; Scoliosis; Minimally invasive; Preoperative planning

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Utilizing VR for preoperative planning in spine surgery significantly reduces operative time and blood loss, while enhancing the surgeon's satisfaction.
Objective: Preoperative planning in spine surgery is a fundamental step of the surgical workup and is often assisted by direct visualization of anatomical 2-dimensional images. This process is time-consuming and may excessively approximate the 3-dimensional (3D) nature of spinal anatomy. Virtual reality (VR) is an emerging technology capable of reconstructing an interactive 3D anatomical model that can be freely explored and manipulated. Methods: Sixty patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis underwent correction of the scoliotic curve by posterior arthrodesis after preoperative planning using traditional on-screen visualization of computed tomography scans (control group, n=30) or exploration of a 3D anatomical model in VR using Google Cardboard (Google Inc.) (VR group, n=30). Mean operative time, blood loss, length of hospital stay, and surgeon's satisfaction were assessed after surgery. Results: The use of VR led to a significant decrease in operative time and bleeding while increasing the surgeon's satisfaction compared to the control group. Conclusion: Preoperative planning with VR turned out to be effective in terms of operative time and blood loss reduction. Moreover, such technology proved to be reproducible, cost-effective, and more satisfactory compared to conventional planning.

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