Autonomous Spinal Robotic System for Transforaminal Lumbar Epidural Injections: A Proof of Concept of Study

Author:

Margalit Adam1,Phalen Henry2ORCID,Gao Cong2,Ma Justin2,Suresh Krishna V.1,Jain Punya1,Farvardin Amirhossein2,Taylor Russell H.2,Armand Mehran2,Chattre Akhil1,Jain Amit1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA

2. Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering, Laboratory for Computational Sensing and Robotics, Baltimore, MD, USA

Abstract

Study Design Phantom study Objective The aim of our study is to demonstrate in a proof-of-concept model whether the use of a marker less autonomous robotic controlled injection delivery system will increase accuracy in the lumbar spine. Methods Ideal transforaminal epidural injection trajectories (bilateral L2/3, L3/4, L4/5, L5/S1 and S1) were planned out on a virtual pre-operative planning software by 1 experienced provider. Twenty transforaminal epidural injections were administered in a lumbar spine phantom model, 10 using a freehand procedure, and 10 using a marker less autonomous spinal robotic system. Procedural accuracy, defined as the difference between pre-operative planning and actual post-operative needle tip distance (mm) and angular orientation (degrees), were assessed between the freehand and robotic procedures. Results Procedural accuracy for robotically placed transforaminal epidural injections was significantly higher with the difference in pre- and post-operative needle tip distance being 20.1 (±5.0) mm in the freehand procedure and 11.4 (±3.9) mm in the robotically placed procedure ( P < .001). Needle tip precision for the freehand technique was 15.6 mm (26.3 – 10.7) compared to 10.1 mm (16.3 – 6.1) for the robotic technique. Differences in needle angular orientation deviation were 5.6 (±3.3) degrees in the robotically placed procedure and 12.0 (±4.8) degrees in the freehand procedure ( P = .003). Conclusion The robotic system allowed for comparable placement of transforaminal epidural injections as a freehand technique by an experienced provider, with additional benefits of improved accuracy and precision.

Funder

NIH

T32 postdoctoral training

National Science Foundation Graduate Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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