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Keywords
Magnification and Illumination
Surgical Telescopes
Surgical Headlights
Definition
Surgical telescopes fixed to the head and a surgical headlight magnify
and illuminate the surgical field. Surgical circumstances in which an
expanded field of vision and greater motion of the hand are beneficial
lend themselves to this surgical equipment. Each surgeon must establish
their own comfort level with hand movement, degree of magnification and
amount of illumination. Graduated magnification can be accomplished in
fixed intervals with different pairs of surgical loupes.
Prescriptions can be built into the eyeglass and a focal length fixed
to a specific working distance. In essence, the zoom of magnification
is factored into the usual operating visual zone of the surgeon. With
magnification in the 2.5 X, 3.5X, 4.5X and 6.0X range, the expanded field
capacity allows the surgeon to avoid getting lost in the periphery. Surgical
headlights bring intense focused light to the specific area of interest
and the ability to cone down to a minimal light field or expand to more
generous boundaries. With a surgical headlight and graduated pairs of
surgical loupes, the principles of magnification and illumination extend
beyond the boundaries of the microscope and endoscope.
Indications
When magnification and illumination are essential components of surgery.
And when aren't they?
Technical Considerations Return to Menu
Surgical telescopes and headlights are useful when greater hand movement
or a particular depth of field is essential to the surgical task.
Literature Review
Featured Review:
A sinlge article emphazes the value of this simple tehcnology applied
to a large series of lumbar herniated discs (ref #1).Complications Return
to Menu
Complications would depend upon the nature of the surgery performed with
the headlight and surgical telescopes.
Authors Comment
There are times where endosocpic and microsurgical level magnification
and illumination do not provide the hand-eye depth and allow movement
in the field of perception necessary to perform the surgical task. The
advantage of the multi-faceted approach is the selection of magnification
and illumination is a key criteria for particular surgeries. After all,
golf is not played with only one club.
References
Savitz, M. H.Minilaminotomy as an alternative to laminectomy or microdiskectomy:
ten years' experience. Mt Sinai J Med 1991 58, 2, 165-7.
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