4.4 Article

The contralateral subfrontal approach can simplify surgery and provide favorable visual outcome in tuberculum sellae meningiomas

Journal

NEUROSURGICAL REVIEW
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 601-607

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10143-012-0397-y

Keywords

Amblyopic; Contralateral; Surgical outcome; Tuberculum sellae meningioma; Tumor-dominant

Funding

  1. Brain Korea 21 Project, Center for Biomedical Human Resources at Chonnam National University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The ipsilateral approach for the tumor-dominant or amblyopic side in surgery of tuberculum sellae meningiomas (TSMs) frequently requires manipulation of the optic nerve and unroofing of the optic canal, which results in postoperative visual aggravation. We suggest a contralateral approach and discuss the benefits with respect to the postoperative visual outcome. Between 2005 and August 2011, 24 patients with TSMs underwent surgical resection via the contralateral approach. The contralateral approach accesses the tumor from the opposite side of the tumor-dominant or amblyopic side. Using this technique, the tumor was separated from the noncompromised optic nerve with only internal debulking. The tumor was dissected from the optic nerve without manipulation of the compromised optic nerve under the direct view of the inferomedial aspect of the optic nerve. The tumor that extended into the optic canal could be removed easily via dural unroofing of the medial wall of the optic canal. Seventeen patients (70.8 %) were improved, 6 (25 %) were unchanged, and 1 (4.2 %) worsened on visual acuity of the affected eye. Fifteen (62.5 %) were improved, 8 (33.3 %) were unchanged, and 1 patient (4.2 %) worsened on visual field defect of the affected eye. However, deterioration of visual acuity and visual field defect of the nonaffected eye was developed in one (4.2 %) and three patients (12.5 %), respectively. Surgical approach-related visual field defect was developed on two patients (8.3 %). The contralateral approach reduces manipulation of the involved optic nerve and directly visualizes the inferomedial aspect of the compromised optic nerve which could result in improvement of postoperative visual outcomes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available