Craniotomy For Hematoma Evacuation
Craniotomy for hematoma evacuation is brain surgery that removes a blood clot to reduce pressure on the brain when appropriate.
Image guided brain surgery is a neurosurgical technique that uses imaging and navigation technology to help the surgeon plan and perform selected brain procedures. It is sometimes called image-guided neurosurgery, neuronavigation, stereotactic navigation, or computer-assisted brain surgery.
The technology may use MRI, CT, functional MRI, diffusion tractography, angiographic imaging, or other imaging studies depending on the condition being treated. These images help create a map of the patient’s brain anatomy before or during surgery.
Image guided brain surgery is not a treatment by itself. It is a surgical planning and localization tool that may be used during procedures such as brain tumor resection, stereotactic brain biopsy, selected skull base surgery, ventricular procedures, or surgery for certain brain lesions. De Novo Brain & Spine evaluates adult patients in Stockbridge, Fayetteville, Atlanta, and surrounding communities to help determine whether image-guided surgery, open surgery, biopsy, observation, medical treatment, radiation, or another treatment plan may be appropriate.
Image guided brain surgery does not treat a condition on its own. It may be used as part of selected brain procedures when accurate localization, surgical planning, or anatomical orientation is important.
Conditions or situations where image guidance may be considered include:
The decision to use image guidance depends on the diagnosis, anatomy, imaging findings, procedure type, surgical goal, and surgeon judgment.
Image guided brain surgery may be considered when a brain condition needs precise localization during surgery. This may include a tumor, mass, biopsy target, cyst, skull base lesion, ventricular target, or other abnormality seen on imaging.
For brain tumors, image guidance may help the surgeon plan the incision, bone opening, surgical path, and relationship of the lesion to nearby brain structures. NCI describes surgery as one treatment option for many adult central nervous system tumors, while also making clear that treatment depends on tumor type, location, and clinical circumstances.
Image guidance may also be considered when the lesion is small, deep, near important functional areas, or difficult to see directly. It can be especially helpful when surgery requires a planned route through or around normal brain structures.
Image guidance does not mean that surgery is automatically needed. Some brain lesions are better managed with observation, medication, radiation, stereotactic radiosurgery, biopsy, or multidisciplinary care.
Doctors determine whether image guided brain surgery may be appropriate by reviewing the patient’s symptoms, neurologic examination, imaging, diagnosis, surgical goals, and overall medical condition.
Evaluation may include:
The decision should not be based on the availability of technology alone. Image guidance is used when it may help the surgeon localize anatomy, plan the safest reasonable path, or guide part of a procedure.
Image guided brain surgery usually begins with detailed imaging. The imaging may be obtained before surgery or during surgery, depending on the procedure and surgical setting.
The images are loaded into a navigation system. The patient’s actual head position is then matched to the imaging map. This matching process is called registration. Once registration is complete, tracked surgical instruments can be displayed on a screen in relation to the patient’s brain anatomy.
During surgery, image guidance may help the surgeon plan the approach, locate a tumor or lesion, guide a biopsy needle, identify the margin of a target area, or understand the relationship between surgical instruments and nearby anatomy.
The surgeon remains responsible for the operation. Image guidance does not perform the surgery, remove tissue automatically, or replace surgical judgment.
The goal of image guided brain surgery is to improve anatomical orientation during selected neurosurgical procedures. It may help the surgeon localize a target, plan a surgical route, guide instruments, and relate the surgical field to preoperative or intraoperative imaging.
Potential benefits may include better surgical planning, improved localization of deep or small lesions, and additional anatomical information during selected procedures. These benefits depend on the quality of imaging, registration accuracy, anatomy, the procedure being performed, and surgeon judgment.
Image guidance has important limitations. It does not guarantee complete tumor removal, improved survival, neurologic recovery, fewer complications, or a better outcome. It also does not make surgery risk-free.
Navigation accuracy can change during surgery. Brain tissue can shift after opening the skull, draining fluid, removing tumor, or changing pressure around the brain. Peer-reviewed neurosurgical literature recognizes brain shift and loss of navigation accuracy as important limitations of neuronavigation.
General risks depend on the actual surgery being performed. These may include infection, bleeding, seizure, stroke, brain swelling, spinal fluid leak, weakness, numbness, speech difficulty, vision changes, memory or thinking changes, incomplete diagnosis, incomplete removal, or need for additional treatment.
Treatment planning depends on the actual diagnosis. Image guided brain surgery is one possible technique used during selected procedures, not a stand-alone alternative to all other treatment.
Other options may include:
These options are not interchangeable. The best plan depends on the diagnosis, lesion location, symptoms, neurologic function, imaging findings, tumor behavior, medical risks, and patient goals.
Recovery after image guided brain surgery depends on the actual procedure performed, not on the navigation system alone.
Recovery after an image-guided brain tumor resection is different from recovery after an image-guided biopsy, skull base procedure, ventricular procedure, or hematoma-related surgery. Follow-up may include neurologic examination, wound checks, imaging, pathology review, seizure monitoring, medication adjustment, rehabilitation, or additional treatment planning.
Patients should follow the recovery instructions for the specific operation they had. Image guidance may assist the procedure, but the diagnosis and surgical treatment determine the recovery plan.
Seek emergency medical care or call 911 for sudden severe headache, new seizure, new weakness or numbness on one side of the body, trouble speaking, confusion, loss of consciousness, sudden vision loss, or rapid neurologic decline.
Urgent evaluation is also important for worsening headaches with vomiting, severe sleepiness, new balance problems, sudden personality changes, fever with worsening headache, or symptoms that suggest increased pressure inside the skull.
After brain surgery, patients should seek urgent medical care for fever, worsening incision redness or drainage, severe headache, new seizure, worsening confusion, weakness, speech difficulty, fluid leakage from the incision, or any neurologic symptom that is new or rapidly worsening.
Image guided brain surgery is used to help plan and localize selected brain procedures. It may be used for brain tumor surgery, stereotactic biopsy, skull base surgery, ventricular procedures, or selected brain lesions.
No. Image guided brain surgery is not a treatment by itself. It is a surgical guidance technique that may be used during certain brain procedures when image-based localization may help the surgeon.
No. Image guidance uses imaging and tracking technology to help localize anatomy and instruments. Robotic-assisted surgery may use a robotic platform to help guide or position instruments. Some systems may work together, but they are not the same thing.
No. Image guidance may help with planning and localization, but it does not eliminate risk. Brain surgery still depends on the diagnosis, anatomy, surgical plan, medical condition, and surgeon judgment.
Navigation accuracy can be affected by registration error, imaging quality, patient movement, equipment limitations, and brain shift during surgery. The surgeon must interpret image guidance in combination with anatomy, direct visualization, and clinical judgment.
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