3-D mapping breakthrough helps docs remove fist-sized tumour from a woman’s brain
July 15th, 2009 - 1:00 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 15 (ANI): Experts at the University of Cincinnati (UC) have successfully removed a fist-sized tumour from the brain of an Indiana woman, using a technology that involves the fusion of four different types of images into a 3-D map of a patient’s brain. An eight-member team from the Brain Tumor Center at the UC Neuroscience Institute carried out the operation at University Hospital. “This marks the culmination of one of the most important developments in brain tumor surgery in the last 100 years,” says Dr. John Tew, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic, professor of neurosurgery and clinical director of the UC Neuroscience Institute. For the surgery, Tew and his team fused and installed the multiple brain scans into a surgical guidance computer, whose function is similar to a global positioning system.
They say that the technology revealed the tumour’s relationship to all of the functional centres, electrical pathways and arteries and veins in the patient’s brain, which is why they were able to map out a safe pathway to the tumour.”This fusion of images is exciting in that it allows us to maximize resection (removal) of the tumour while preserving function for the patient,” says Dr. James Leach, an associate professor of neuroradiology at UC who performed the processing and fusion of images.
Since early 2007, specialists have used the fusion of three types of imaging as a guide to stereotactic surgery-Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that creates detailed pictures of the body by detecting differences in magnetic signals between different types of tissues; functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) that creates a series of images that capture blood oxygen levels in parts of the brain that are responsible for movement, perception and cognition; and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) that provides a map of critical white-matter tracts, which facilitate electrical connections between different parts of the brain.Leach revealed that the latest work added the fusion of computed tomography angiography (CTA), which provides a map of blood vessels-arteries and veins. “The 3T system allows us to image the functional areas of the brain using various language, motor and vision tasks with the patient in the MRI scanner. The addition of the DTI sequence allows the connections between these areas and other parts of the nervous system to be identified at the same time,” Leach says.Tew said that the three-dimensional brain-mapping enabled his team to navigate a trajectory through the patient’s brain, and to remove 90 percent of the malignant tumour, an anaplastic astrocytoma, without harming the healthy brain tissue-including the deep nerve-fibre tracts-that surrounded it.
According to the researcher, the patient was talking normally right after surgery, and she was walking the halls and able to take a shower without assistance one day after surgery. The team sought to eradicate the remaining tumour by applying a course of 33 computer-guided, fractionated radiotherapy treatments as a first approach. (ANI)
- New technology helps extract fist-sized tumour - Jul 15, 2009
- New technique diagnoses brain cancers non-invasively - Jan 29, 2012
- Brain 'network maps' reveal clue to mental decline in old age - Feb 09, 2011
- Over an hour of meditation reduces pain - Apr 06, 2011
- Restless legs? There could be brain malfunction - Nov 18, 2011
- Breakthrough in MRI allows brain scans more than 7 times faster - Jan 06, 2011
- New discovery paves way for early detection of Alzheimer's - Jun 29, 2010
- World's largest study shows brain recovery, speech improvement possible after stroke - Sep 29, 2010
- Bedside exam unreliable in assessing severe brain injuries: Study - Feb 26, 2011
- Ultrasound as effective as CT scans in most cases - May 12, 2011
- MRI scan 'better' than invasive tests for heart patients - Dec 23, 2011
- Brain waves can foretell future actions - Jul 01, 2011
- Our brain keeps growing well into our 20s - Sep 23, 2011
- New brain scan better detects early signs of Alzheimer's - Jan 07, 2010
- Brain area critical for forming unconscious memories identified - Dec 16, 2010
Tags: arteries and veins, blood oxygen levels, brain tumor center, brain tumor surgery, diffusion tensor imaging, electrical pathways, functional magnetic resonance, functional magnetic resonance imaging, global positioning system, guidance computer, james leach, magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance imaging mri, mayfield clinic, movement perception, neuroscience institute, perception and cognition, resonance imaging mri, surgical guidance, types of tissues