Ventriculostomy is a common neurosurgery procedure performed for many purposes. Kocher’s point is most often used as the ventriculostomy entry point. But the accuracy of a cannula’s trajectory into the ventricles from entry at Kocher’s point is controversial. In this paper we attempt to evaluate the accuracy of the conventional sagittal trajectory, which uses Kocher’s point, and evaluate a new trajectory by creating virtual ventriculostomy simulations from computed tomography images of the brain. About 66 patients without brain and skull pathology in radiography were included. Three dimensional images were constructed using thin sliced brain computed tomography images, and a virtual ventriculostomy was performed toward the previous used surface landmark. And the path of ideal ventricular catheter was simulated. The anterior surface landmarks included the ipsilateral medial canthus, the contralateral medial canthus, and the midpoint between bilateral medial canthi. The lateral surface landmark was the external auditory canal. The sagittal trajectory of the three surface landmarks located in the frontal horn of ipsilateral ventricle was 0% for the ipsilateral medial canthus, 87.88% for the midpoint between bilateral medial canthi and 26.52% for the contralateral medial canthus. The anterior surface target of ideal sagittal trajectory, which connects the Kocher’s point with the central axis of ipsilateral ventricle, is contralaterally 6.7 mm away from midline. It was found that the conventional sagittal trajectory is inaccurate. The anterior target of surface landmark for the ideal sagittal trajectory is medial one third of the distance between the midline and the contralateral medial canthus.
CITATION STYLE
Park, B., Han, S., Byoun, H. S., Han, S., Choi, S. W., & Lim, J. (2020). The assessment of geometric reliability of conventional trajectory of ventriculostomy in a three dimensional virtual model and proposal of a new trajectory. Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica, 60(5), 264–270. https://doi.org/10.2176/nmc.oa.2019-0304
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