Robot-assisted surgery and navigation
Boston Children’s has a long, successful history of using surgical navigation techniques to assure safe, precise placement of spinal instrumentation (the screws and rods used to stabilize patients’ spines).
In 2019, the Spine Division became one of the first pediatric hospitals in the country to use the Mazor X Stealth robotic navigation system. During preoperative planning, the robotic system supports accurate, effective planning. During surgery, the system’s robotic arm and real-time imaging guide surgeons in finding precise locations and angles as they place spinal instrumentation in patients’ spines. In complex procedures in which precision is absolutely essential, this technology has been shown to improve accuracy and enhance patient safety.
Intraoperative CT scan
Since 2015, our surgeons have used an intraoperative CT scan, called the O-arm, which enables the surgical team to confirm the correct placement of spinal instrumentation, leading to higher accuracy and patient safety.
We recently published a series of case studies of complex cervical spine patients who underwent spinal surgery in which the O-arm was used. This series confirms that the use of O-arm in pediatric patients is an effective way to verify screw placement and can prevent incorrect positioning that could cause potential neurologic harm.