Author:
Deliège Lara,Ramdat Misier Karan,Silva Dulanka,James Gregory,Ong Juling,Dunaway David,Jeelani Noor Ul Owase,Schievano Silvia,Borghi Alessandro
Abstract
AbstractSpring-assisted posterior vault expansion has been adopted at the London Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children to treat raised intracranial pressure in patients affected by syndromic craniosynostosis, a congenital calvarial anomaly causing the premature fusion of skull sutures. This procedure involves elastic distractors used to dynamically reshape the skull and increase the intracranial volume (ICV). In this study, we developed and validated a patient-specific model able to predict the ICV increase and carried out a parametric study to investigate the effect of surgical parameters on that final volume. Pre- and post-operative computed tomography data relative to 18 patients were processed to extract simplified patient-specific skull shape, replicate surgical cuts, and simulate spring expansion. A parametric study was performed to quantify each parameter’s impact on the surgical outcome: for each patient, the osteotomy location was varied in a pre-defined range; local sensitivity of the predicted ICV to each parameter was analysed and compared. Results showed that the finite element model performed well in terms of post-operative ICV prediction and allowed for parametric optimization of surgical cuts. The study indicates how to optimize the ICV increase according to the type of procedure and provides indication on the most robust surgical strategy.
Funder
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children Charity
the European Research Council
NIHR British Research Council Advanced Therapies for Structural Malformations and Tissue Damage pump-prime funding call
Great Ormond Street Hospital Charity Clinical Research Starter Grant
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC