201. MR guidance and thermometry of percutaneous laser disc decompression in open MRI: an initial clinical investigation.
- Author
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Streitparth F, Hartwig T, Walter T, De Bucourt M, Putzier M, Strube P, Bretschneider T, Freyhardt P, Maurer M, Renz D, Gebauer B, Hamm B, and Teichgräber UK
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Multimodal Imaging methods, Pilot Projects, Decompression, Surgical methods, Intervertebral Disc Displacement pathology, Intervertebral Disc Displacement surgery, Laser Therapy methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Surgery, Computer-Assisted methods, Thermography methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the feasibility, safety and efficacy of real-time MR guidance and thermometry of percutaneous laser disc decompression (PLDD)., Methods: Twenty-four discs in 22 patients with chronic low-back and radicular pain were treated by PLDD using open 1.0-T magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI). A fluoroscopic proton-density-weighted turbo spin-echo (PDw TSE) sequence was used to position the laser fibre. Non-spoiled gradient-echo (GRE) sequences were employed for real-time thermal monitoring based on proton resonance frequency (PRF). Radicular pain was assessed over 6 months with a numerical rating scale (NRS)., Results: PLDD was technically successful in all cases, with adequate image quality for laser positioning. The PRF-based real-time temperature monitoring was found to be feasible in practice. After 6 months, 21 % reported complete remission of radicular pain, 63 % at least great pain relief and 74 % at least mild relief. We found a significant decrease in the NRS score between the pre-intervention and the 6-month follow-up assessment (P < 0.001). No major complications occurred; the single adverse event recorded, moderate motor impairment, resolved., Conclusions: Real-time MR guidance and PRF-based thermometry of PLDD in the lumbar spine under open 1.0-T MRI appears feasible, safe and effective and may pave the way to more precise operating procedures., Key Points: • Percutaneous laser disc decompression (PLDD) is increasingly used instead of conventional surgery. • Open 1.0-T MRI with temperature mapping seems technically successful in monitoring PLDD. • Pain relief was at least 'great' in 64 % of patients. • No major complications occurred. • Open 1.0-T MRI appears a safe and effective option for patient-tailored PLDD.
- Published
- 2013
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