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- Satoru Shimizu, Hiroyuki Koizumi, Ichiyo Shibahara, and Toshihiro Kumabe.
- Department of Neurosurgery, NHO Sagamihara National Hospital, Sagamihara, Kanagawa, Japan. Electronic address: Satoru4756@aol.com.
- World Neurosurg. 2024 Jul 1; 187: e914e919e914-e919.
BackgroundBone flap resorption is an issue after autologous cranioplasty. Critical temperatures above 50°C generated by power-driven craniotomy tools may lead to thermal osteonecrosis, a possible factor in resorption. This ex vivo study examined whether the tools produced excessive heat resulting in bone flap resorption.MethodsUsing swine scapulae maintained at body temperature, burr holes, straight and curved cuts, and wire-pass holes were made with power-driven craniotomy tools. Drilling was at the conventional feed rate (FR) plus irrigation (FR-I+), at a high FR plus irrigation (hFR-I+), and at high FR without irrigation (hFR-I-). The temperature in each trial was recorded by an infrared thermographic camera.ResultsWith FR-I+, the maximum temperature at the burr holes, the cuts, and the wire-pass holes was 69.0°C, 56.7°C, and 46.2°C, respectively. With hFR-I+, these temperatures were 53.1°C, 52.1°C, and 46.0°C, with hFR-I- they were 56.0°C, 66.5°C, and 50.0°C; hFR-I- burr hole- and cutting procedures resulted in the highest incidence of bone temperatures above 50°C followed by FR-I+, and hFR-I+. At the site of wire-pass holes, only hFR-I- drilling produced this temperature.ConclusionsExcept during prolonged procedures in thick bones, most drilling with irrigation did not reach the critical temperature. Drilling without irrigation risked generating the critical temperature. Knowing those characteristics may be a help to perform craniotomy with less thermal bone damage.Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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