6533b828fe1ef96bd1288de0

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Virtual temporal bone: an interactive 3-dimensional learning aid for cranial base surgery.

Peter Y. K. HwangRalf A. Kockro

subject

MaleEngineering drawingmedicine.medical_specialtyNeuronavigationSoftware ValidationWorkspaceVirtual realityprojectsNeurosurgical ProceduresUser-Computer InterfaceCadaverTemporal bonemedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansSegmentationIntraoperative ComplicationsNeuronavigationSkull BaseCranial Fossa Middlebusiness.industryVisible human projectDissectionTeachingTemporal BoneVisible Human ProjectsVestibulocochlear NerveSurgeryDextroscopeFacial Nerveprojects.projectEducation Medical GraduateEar InnerSurgeryNeurology (clinical)businessCarotid Artery InternalSoftwarePetrous Bone

description

OBJECTIVE: We have developed an interactive virtual model of the temporal bone for the training and teaching of cranial base surgery. METHODS: The virtual model was based on the tomographic data of the Visible Human Project. The male Visible Human's computed tomographic data were volumetrically reconstructed as virtual bone tissue, and the individual photographic slices provided the basis for segmentation of the middle and inner ear structures, cranial nerves, vessels, and brainstem. These structures were created by using outlining and tube editing tools, allowing structural modeling either directly on the basis of the photographic data or according to information from textbooks and cadaver dissections. For training and teaching, the virtual model was accessed in the previously described 3-dimensional workspaces of the Dextroscope or Dextrobeam (Volume Interactions Pte, Ltd., Singapore), whose interfaces enable volumetric exploration from any perspective and provide virtual tools for drilling and measuring. RESULTS: We have simulated several cranial base procedures including approaches via the floor of the middle fossa and the lateral petrous bone. The virtual model suitably illustrated the core facts of anatomic spatial relationships while simulating different stages of bone drilling along a variety of surgical corridors. The system was used for teaching during training courses to plan and discuss operative anatomy and strategies. CONCLUSION: The Virtual Temporal Bone and its surrounding 3-dimensional workspace provide an effective way to study the essential surgical anatomy of this complex region and to teach and train operative strategies, especially when used as an adjunct to cadaver dissections.

10.1227/01.neu.0000343744.46080.91https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19404102