System Lets Surgeons Image the Brain While they Operate On It
September 7th, 2013 by admin

A real-time MRI system can help surgeons perform faster and safer brain operations.

By Susan Young

A new system for visualizing the brain during surgery is helping neurosurgeons more accurately diagnose and treat patients and is even allowing them to perform some procedures that until now have been extremely difficult or even impossible.

Neurosurgeons can use the imaging technology during surgeries that require small objects—biopsy needles, implants, or tubes to deliver drugs—to be placed at precise locations in the brain. The system provides live magnetic resonance images (MRI) that allow surgeons to monitor their progress during the operation.

Typically, neurosurgeons use an MRI before a surgery to plan the trajectory of the operation, based on the brain’s position relative to a guidance frame that’s screwed onto the patient’s skull, says Robert Gross, a neurosurgeon at Emory University. But the brain can shift before the actual surgery takes place, he says, rendering that MRI inaccurate. To check on what’s happening inside a patient’s skull, doctors have to stop the surgery and perhaps even move the patient out of the operating room.

To address these issues, researchers have been developing new neurosurgical guidance systems that can work with the strong magnets and electronic signals used by MRI scanners. The medical-device company Medtronic, for example, offers a real-time MRI imaging system for neurosurgery. But Gross says the most useful system on the market is offered by MRI interventions, a medical device company based in Memphis, Tennessee.