Incorporating mixed reality head mounted display technology in biportal endoscopic lumbar surgery: an early feasibility study
Hana-Joy E. Hanks, Michael S. Kim, Rowen Lin, Vivan Chen, Andy T. Ton, Emily Mills, Hao-Hua Wu, Sohaib Z. Hashmi, Yu-Po Lee, Nitin N. Bhatia, Wongthawat Liawrungrueang, Max Meng-Huang Wu, Jung-Woo Hur, Don Young Park

TL;DR
This study explores using Apple Vision Pro mixed reality glasses during spine surgery, finding no increase in surgeon workload or complications.
Contribution
The study is the first to evaluate Apple Vision Pro as a visualization tool in biportal endoscopic lumbar surgery.
Findings
AVP HMD use did not increase surgeon cognitive workload during surgery.
No significant complications were observed with AVP HMD use.
Patient outcomes improved significantly after surgery.
Abstract
Mixed reality (MR) technology has emerged as a promising technology to endoscopic spine surgery by enhancing surgeon visualization. This early feasibility study introduces the Apple Vision Pro (Apple Inc., Cupertino, CA) Head Mounted Display (AVP HMD) as an intraoperative visualization tool during biportal endoscopic spine surgeries. The SURG-TLX is an established workload assessment tool specifically tailored for surgical procedures and is a specialized modification of the NASA-TLX, a widely established multidimensional measure for cognitive workload. Adult patients undergoing biportal endoscopic lumbar surgery using the AVP HMD were prospectively followed. SURG-TLX Scores were recorded immediately after each operation to document the cognitive workload of using the AVP HMD during surgery. Demographics, intraoperative, and postoperative complications were collected and assessed.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAugmented Reality Applications · Surgical Simulation and Training · Intraoperative Neuromonitoring and Anesthetic Effects
