Home › Forum › Announcements / Infos › Frontiers- Computer-aided therapy of the central and peripheral nervous systems
- This topic has 3 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 8 months ago by Hugo.
-
AuthorPosts
-
16 March 2016 at 19:50 #6352MichelBlocked
Research Topic – Frontiers in Computer-aided therapy of the central and peripheral nervous systems
Submission Deadlines
29 April 2016 Abstract
28 October 2016 ManuscriptTopic Editors
Justin Schultz Cetas, M.D.
Oregon Health & Science UniversityMichel Audette, Ph.D.,
Old Dominion University
Norfolk, USAComputer assistance technologies have revolutionized neurosurgical practice by building on advances in medical imaging, medical image analysis, surgical navigation, robotics and simulation. Moreover, computer-aided neurological surgery and therapy, defined in a broad sense, are continuing to make great strides, which has an impact on the outcome of patients afflicted with myriad disorders of the central nervous system (CNS) and peripheral nervous system (PNS). This research topic will address clinically transformative neurological therapies that center on the CNS and PNS. In a manner that befits the multidisciplinary challenges that characterize these innovations, the editors and contributors to this online publication will be both physicians and engineers. While there may be overlap with other online publications, including Frontiers journals, the emphasis will be on the practical improvement on patient outcome through technological advances on therapies targeting the CNS and PNS.
These research topics will include the following areas:
• Descriptive surgery planning and navigation, which in particular improve on commercially available technologies.
• Surgical robotics that center on stable, accurate delivery of therapies to the CNS or PNS.
• Medical simulation for training and device development, with an emphasis on therapies of the CNS and PNS.
• Innovations in medical imaging that promise to transform how we visualize neuroanatomy, with a particular impact on neurological treatment.
• Medical image analysis algorithms with a transformative impact on neurological surgery and therapy.
• Computer-assisted radiation therapy targeting the nervous system.While these topics may seem diverse, in reality they are all facets of a similar thrust in Neurosurgery to combine rapidly improving imaging modalities with powerful and expanding computing power to model, plan and treat neurological disease through smaller surgical corridors and less morbidity to surrounding structures such as blood vessels, functional brain, fiber tracts cranial nerves and so forth. Another way to phrase the overarching theme is that the application of computers to neurosurgery will allow us to plan and treat individual patients based on their unique functional anatomy and thereby reduce surgical morbidity and improve outcomes. Combining these different applications of computer assistance technologies in one place will, hopefully, allow for cross-fertilization across disciplines.
29 March 2016 at 14:34 #6393HugoKeymasterHi Michel,
Is this a PhD position?
Is this based on SOFA?
If yes, we would be happy to forward it.Cheers,
Hugo
29 March 2016 at 15:16 #6398MichelBlockedHi Hugo,
no, this is a special edition of an online journal, which centers on computer-aided therapy. I feel that it could include anything that your group does towards neurosurgery simulation based on SOFA.
Best wishes,
Michel
29 March 2016 at 17:01 #6401HugoKeymasterNice to hear, thank you Michel.
Cheers,Hugo
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.