Stereotactic Neurosurgery

The Duke University Medical Center Library Stereotactic Museum was established to preserve the stereotactic instruments that significantly impacted the field of neurosurgery. The collection is largely due to the generosity of Drs. Robert Heimberger, Hirotaro Narabayashi, George Austin, Sheng-Ling Wu, Robert Rand, and Robert Iacono, who donated their instruments. Eric Cosman, Professor Physics, MIT, donated an early Radionics radiofrequency (RF) lesion maker.

The museum was dedicated on September 24, 2003. Dr. Philip Gildenberg, Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Radiation Oncology, Baylor College of Medicine (Houston), presented a fascinating lecture at the dedication on "The Birth of Human Stereotactic Surgery."

The museum would not have been possible without the support and enthusiasm of Patricia Thibodeau, Associate Dean of the Medical Center Library and Archives, and Suzanne Porter, Curator of the History of Medicine Collections. The Mary Duke Biddle Foundation, The Josiah Charles Trent Memorial Foundation, and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flynt gave much appreciated initial financial support to establish the museum.

The collection is now in storage with select items on display in the Richmond House Room, Level 1, Medical Center Library.

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List of items in this collection
  Title
 

Rand and Malcolm radiolucent surgical head holder

1988
Rand and Malcolm radiolucent surgical head holder. USA. 1988. This radiolucent surgical head holder stabilized the patient while allowing direct...
 

Talairach rectilinear stereotactic system. France.

1949
Talairach rectilinear stereotactic system. France 1949. This rectilinear orthogonial instrument consisted of a heavy frame and fixation pins. Two...
 

Rand-Urban stereotactic arc system. USA.

1956
Rand-Urban stereotactic arc system. USA. 1956. This stereotactic instrument was designed as an arc system in order to place the patient's head in...
 

Wu skull fixed system

undated
Wu skull fixed system. China. Used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease, the instrument was attached to a burr hole in the skull. Angular...
 

Todd-Wells arc-focal point system. USA.

1965
Todd-Wells arc-focal point system. USA. 1965. Built by Edwin M. Todd and Trent H. Wells, Jr.
 

Rand Stereotactic Instrument for Yttrium Hypophysectomy

undated
Rand Stereotactic Instrument for Yttrium Hypophysectomy. Los Angeles: Trent H. Wells of the Mechanical Development Co., 1953. This instrument was...
 

Nashold arc system. USA.

1969
Nashold arc system. USA. 1969. Based on the arc principle, this instrument was unique since it was made specifically to lesion the cerebellar...
 

Heimberger arc system. USA.

1972
Heimberger arc system. USA. 1972. This arc system was made in 1972 by Dr. Robert Heimberger, professor of Neurosurgery at Indiana University...
 

Bertrand rectilinear system. Canada. 1953.

1953
Bertrand rectilinear system. Canada. 1953. Dr. Claude Bertrand, the French Canadian neurosurgeon, introduced his pneumotaxic guide in 1953 for the...
 

Austin and Lee burr hole system. USA. 1956.

1956
Austin and Lee burr hole system. USA. 1956. The basic design consisted of a device mounted on a burr hole in the skull. It allowed guidance at...