August 07, 2020

New Technology Simulates X-Ray Vision for Surgeons

BY Dr. Keith J. Kaplan

rush-university

July 9, 2020
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Surgeon at Rush is first to use augmented reality imaging during minimally invasive spine surgery

Until now, to perform a minimally invasive surgery or other minimally invasive procedures, a physician would typically need to watch a monitor to see an X-ray view of the movement of surgical instruments inside the patient’s body. Now a revolutionary new technology enables physicians to see the surgical field in three dimensions as if they were looking through the skin and into the patient’s body with X-ray vision.

On June 15, Dr. Frank Phillips, professor and director of the Division of Spine Surgery and the Sections of Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery at Rush University Medical Center, became the first doctor in the world to use this augmented reality surgical guidance in a minimally invasive spine surgery.

Using the xvision Spine System by Augmedics, a Chicago-area medical technology company, Phillips was able to perform a lumbar fusion with spinal implants on a patient with spinal instability. Phillips said that the patient, who was experiencing severe back pain and limited mobility prior to the surgery, is doing well.

The xvision Spine System utilizes a headset with a transparent near-eye display. It accurately determines the position of surgical tools, in real time, and a virtual trajectory of the tools then is superimposed on the CT imaging of the patient’s body.

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