TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative Anatomical Studies in Neurosurgery: A Systematic and Critical Review of Research Methods
AU - Agosti, Edoardo
AU - De Maria, Lucio
AU - Mattogno, Pier Paolo
AU - Della Pepa, Giuseppe Maria
AU - D'Onofrio, Ginevra Federica
AU - Fiorindi, Alessandro
AU - Lauretti, Liverana
AU - Olivi, Alessandro
AU - Fontanella, Marco Maria
AU - Doglietto, Francesco
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Background: The anatomy laboratory can provide the ideal setting for the preclinical phase of neurosurgical research. Our purpose is to comprehensively and critically review the preclinical anatomical quantification methods used in cranial neurosurgery. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following the PRISMA guidelines. The PubMed, Ovid MEDLINE, and Ovid EMBASE databases were searched, yielding 1667 papers. A statistical analysis was performed using R. Results: The included studies were published from 1996 to 2023. The risk of bias assessment indicated high-quality studies. Target exposure was the most studied feature (81.7%), mainly with area quantification (64.9%). The surgical corridor was quantified in 60.9% of studies, more commonly with the quantification of the angle of view (60%). Neuronavigation-based methods benefit from quantifying the surgical pyramid features that define a cranial neurosurgical approach and allowing post-dissection data analyses. Direct measurements might diminish the error that is inherent to navigation methods and are useful to collect a small amount of data. Conclusion: Quantifying neurosurgical approaches in the anatomy laboratory provides an objective assessment of the surgical corridor and target exposure. There is currently limited comparability among quantitative neurosurgical anatomy studies; sharing common research methods will provide comparable data that might also be investigated with artificial intelligence methods.
AB - Background: The anatomy laboratory can provide the ideal setting for the preclinical phase of neurosurgical research. Our purpose is to comprehensively and critically review the preclinical anatomical quantification methods used in cranial neurosurgery. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following the PRISMA guidelines. The PubMed, Ovid MEDLINE, and Ovid EMBASE databases were searched, yielding 1667 papers. A statistical analysis was performed using R. Results: The included studies were published from 1996 to 2023. The risk of bias assessment indicated high-quality studies. Target exposure was the most studied feature (81.7%), mainly with area quantification (64.9%). The surgical corridor was quantified in 60.9% of studies, more commonly with the quantification of the angle of view (60%). Neuronavigation-based methods benefit from quantifying the surgical pyramid features that define a cranial neurosurgical approach and allowing post-dissection data analyses. Direct measurements might diminish the error that is inherent to navigation methods and are useful to collect a small amount of data. Conclusion: Quantifying neurosurgical approaches in the anatomy laboratory provides an objective assessment of the surgical corridor and target exposure. There is currently limited comparability among quantitative neurosurgical anatomy studies; sharing common research methods will provide comparable data that might also be investigated with artificial intelligence methods.
KW - anatomical studies
KW - comparison
KW - neurosurgical approach
KW - quantification
KW - research method
KW - anatomical studies
KW - comparison
KW - neurosurgical approach
KW - quantification
KW - research method
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/267415
U2 - 10.3390/life13091822
DO - 10.3390/life13091822
M3 - Article
SN - 2075-1729
VL - 13
SP - 1
EP - 21
JO - Life
JF - Life
ER -