Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Surgical Procedures, Operative Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Spectroscopy (2)
- Aortic stenosis (1)
- Aortic valve (1)
- Aortic valve replacement (1)
- Aortic valve stenosis (1)
-
- Clinical applications (1)
- Colorimetry (1)
- Elderly (1)
- Fluorescence (1)
- Fluorescence and luminescence (1)
- Homo sapiens (1)
- Imaging systems (1)
- Imaging through turbid media (1)
- Medical and biological imaging (1)
- Medical optics instrumentation (1)
- Optical pathology (1)
- Patient‐centred care (1)
- Perception psychology (1)
- Risk (1)
- Shared decision making (1)
- Therapeutics (1)
- Tissue diagnostics (1)
- Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (1)
- Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (1)
- Valve replacement (1)
- Valvular heart disease (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Surgical Procedures, Operative
Patient‐Defined Goals For The Treatment Of Severe Aortic Stenosis: A Qualitative Analysis, Megan Coylewright, Roseanne Palmer, Elizabeth S. O'Neill, John F. Robb, Terri Fried
Patient‐Defined Goals For The Treatment Of Severe Aortic Stenosis: A Qualitative Analysis, Megan Coylewright, Roseanne Palmer, Elizabeth S. O'Neill, John F. Robb, Terri Fried
Dartmouth Scholarship
Patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS) at high risk for aortic valve replacement are a unique population with multiple treatment options, including medical therapy, surgical aortic valve replacement and transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). Traditionally, in elderly populations, goals of treatment may favour quality of life over survival. Professional guidelines recommend that clinicians engage patients in shared decision making, a process that may lead to decisions more aligned with patient-defined goals of care. Goals of care for high-risk patients with AS are not well defined in the literature, and patient-reported barriers to shared decision making highlight the need for explicit …
Improved Sensitivity To Fluorescence For Cancer Detection In Wide-Field Image-Guided Neurosurgery, Michael Jermyn, Yoann Gosselin, Pablo A. Valdes, Mira Sibai, Kolbein Kolste
Improved Sensitivity To Fluorescence For Cancer Detection In Wide-Field Image-Guided Neurosurgery, Michael Jermyn, Yoann Gosselin, Pablo A. Valdes, Mira Sibai, Kolbein Kolste
Dartmouth Scholarship
In glioma surgery, Protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) fluorescence may identify residual tumor that could be resected while minimizing damage to normal brain. We demonstrate that improved sensitivity for wide-field spectroscopic fluorescence imaging is achieved with minimal disruption to the neurosurgical workflow using an electron-multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD) relative to a state-of-the-art CMOS system. In phantom experiments the EMCCD system can detect at least two orders-of-magnitude lower PpIX. Ex vivo tissue imaging on a rat glioma model demonstrates improved fluorescence contrast compared with neurosurgical fluorescence microscope technology, and the fluorescence detection is confirmed with measurements from a clinically-validated spectroscopic probe. Greater PpIX …
Review Of Fluorescence Guided Surgery Visualization And Overlay Techniques, Jonathan T. Elliott, Alisha V. Dsouza, Scott C. Davis, Jonathan D. Olson, Keith Paulsen, David Roberts, Brian Pogue
Review Of Fluorescence Guided Surgery Visualization And Overlay Techniques, Jonathan T. Elliott, Alisha V. Dsouza, Scott C. Davis, Jonathan D. Olson, Keith Paulsen, David Roberts, Brian Pogue
Dartmouth Scholarship
In fluorescence guided surgery, data visualization represents a critical step between signal capture and display needed for clinical decisions informed by that signal. The diversity of methods for displaying surgical images are reviewed, and a particular focus is placed on electronically detected and visualized signals, as required for near-infrared or low concentration tracers. Factors driving the choices such as human perception, the need for rapid decision making in a surgical environment, and biases induced by display choices are outlined. Five practical suggestions are outlined for optimal display orientation, color map, transparency/alpha function, dynamic range compression, and color perception check.
Quantitative Spatial Frequency Fluorescence Imaging In The Sub-Diffusive Domain For Image-Guided Glioma Resection, Mira Sibai, Israel Veilleux, Jonathan T. Elliott, Frederic Leblond, Brian Wilson
Quantitative Spatial Frequency Fluorescence Imaging In The Sub-Diffusive Domain For Image-Guided Glioma Resection, Mira Sibai, Israel Veilleux, Jonathan T. Elliott, Frederic Leblond, Brian Wilson
Dartmouth Scholarship
Intraoperative 5- aminolevulinic acid induced-Protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) fluorescence guidance enables maximum safe resection of glioblastomas by providing surgeons with real-time tumor optical contrast. However, visual assessment of PpIX fluorescence is subjective and limited by the distorting effects of light attenuation and tissue autofluorescence. We have previously shown that non-invasive point measurements of absolute PpIX concentration identifies residual tumor that is otherwise non-detectable. Here, we extend this approach to wide-field quantitative fluorescence imaging by implementing spatial frequency domain imaging to recover tissue optical properties across the field-of-view in phantoms and ex vivo tissue.