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    Robotic Assisted MRI-Guided Interventional Interstitial MR Guided Focused Ultrasound Ablation in a Swine Model

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    Authors
    MacDonell, Jacquelyn
    Gounis, Matthew J.
    King, Robert M.
    Bogdanov, Gene
    Brooks, Olivia W.
    Langan, Erin T.
    Pilitsis, Julie G.
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    New England Center for Stroke Research
    Department of Radiology
    Document Type
    Journal Article
    Publication Date
    2018-06-14
    Keywords
    Neurology
    Radiology
    Surgery
    
    Metadata
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    Link to Full Text
    https://doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyy266
    Abstract
    BACKGROUND: Ablative lesions are current treatments for epilepsy and brain tumors. Interstitial magnetic resonance (MR) guided focused ultrasound (iMRgFUS) may be an alternate ablation technique which limits thermal tissue charring as compared to laser therapy (LITT) and can produce larger ablation patterns nearer the surface than transcranial MR guided focused ultrasound (tcMRgFUS). OBJECTIVE: To describe our experience with interstitial focused ultrasound (iFUS) ablations in swine, using MR-guided robotically assisted (MRgRA) delivery. METHODS: In an initial 3 animals, we optimized the workflow of the robot in the MR suite and made modifications to the robotic arm to allow range of motion. Then, 6 farm pigs (4 acute, 2 survival) underwent 7 iMRgFUS ablations using MRgRA. We altered dosing to explore differences between thermal dosing in brain as compared to other tissues. Imaging was compared to gross examination. RESULTS: Our work culminated in adjustments to the MRgRA, iMRgFUS probes, and dosing, culminating in 2 survival surgeries; swine had ablations with no neurological sequelae at 2 wk postprocedure. Immediately following iMRgFUS therapy, diffusion-weighted imaging, and T1 weighted MR were accurate reflections of the ablation volume. T2 and fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) images were accurate reflections of ablation volume 1-wk postprocedure. CONCLUSION: We successfully performed MRgRA iFUS ablation in swine and found intraoperative and postoperative imaging to correlate with histological examination. These data are useful to validate our system and to guide imaging follow-up for thermal ablation lesions in brain tissue from our therapy, tcMRgFUS, and LITT.
    Source

    Neurosurgery. 2018 Jun 14. pii: 5037802. doi: 10.1093/neuros/nyy266. Link to article on publisher's site

    DOI
    10.1093/neuros/nyy266
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/48292
    PubMed ID
    29905844
    Notes

    Full list of authors omitted for brevity. For full list see article.

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    Link to Article in PubMed

    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1093/neuros/nyy266
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