Purpose: MR-guided injections are safer for the patient and the physician than CT-guided interventions but require a significant amount of hand-eye coordination and mental registration by the physician. We propose a low-cost, adjustable, handheld guide to assist the operator in aligning the needle in the correct orientation for the injection.
Methods: The operator adjusts the guide to the desired insertion angle as determined by an MRI image. Next, the operator aligns the guide in the image plane using the horizontal laser and level gradient. The needle is inserted into the sleeve of the guide and inserted into the patient. To evaluate the method, two operators inserted 5 needles in two facet joints of a lumbar spine phantom. Insertion points, final points and trajectory angles were compared to the projected needle trajectory using an electromagnetic tracking system.
Results: On their first attempt, operators were able to insert the needle into the facet joint 85% of the time. On average, operators had an insertion point error of 2.92 ± 1.57 mm, a target point error of 3.39 ± 2.28 mm, and a trajectory error of 3.98 ± 2.09 degrees.
Conclusion: A low-cost, adjustable, handheld guide was developed to assist in correctly positioning a needle in MR-guided needle interventions. The guide is as accurate as other needle placement assistance mechanisms, including the biplane laser guides and image overlay devices when used in lumbar facet joint injections in phantoms.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.