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Methodology and Clinical Experience with Computed Tomography and a Computer-resident Stereotactic Atlas
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1985
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Computed TomographyDiagnosisBrain MappingSurgeryAnatomyClinical ExperienceGross AnatomyCt ScanNeurologyAnatomical LandmarksComputational AnatomyRadiologyHealth SciencesNeuroimaging ModalityComputer-assisted SurgeryMedical ImagingNeuroimagingStereotactic CoordinatesMedical Image ComputingBrain ImagingDiagnostic NeuroradiologyMovement DisordersNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineComputer-resident Stereotactic Atlas
We have developed a computer-resident stereotactic atlas of the human brain that quantitatively defines subcortical structures within anatomical landmarks detected on obliquely reconstructed computed tomography (CT) slices. Horizontal stereotactic atlas sections can be stretched and contracted by polar transformation and labeled by a computer to fit within these CT scan-defined landmarks. The stereotactic coordinates of any substructure on the atlas-labeled CT slice may then be calculated by the computer and expressed in mechanical adjustments on a stereotactic surgical frame located in the operating room. We demonstrate the use of this method in the stereotactic treatment of movement disorders as an augmentation to conventional ventriculography and microelectrode recording.