Extended endoscopic endonasal transclival approach to the ventrolateral brainstem and related cisternal spaces: anatomical study |
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Authors: | Elena d’Avella Flavio Angileri Matteo de Notaris Joaquin Enseñat Vita Stagno Luigi Maria Cavallo Joan Berenguer Gonzales Alessandro Weiss Alberto Prats-Galino |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Neurological Science, Division of Neurosurgery, University of Padua, Via Giustinianeo 2, 00135, Padua, Italy 2. Department of Neurological Science, Division of Neurosurgery, University of Messina, Messina, Italy 4. Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital Clinic, Faculty of Medicine, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain 3. Department of Neurological Sciences, Division of Neurosurgery, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy 6. Department of Radiology, Hospital Clinic, Faculty of Medicine, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain 5. Laboratory of Surgical NeuroAnatomy (LSNA), Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit, Faculty of Medicine, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
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Abstract: | Advances in endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery have led to the development of new routes to areas beyond the midline skull base. Recently, feasible surgical corridors to the lateral skull base have been described. The aim of this study was to describe the anatomical exposure of the ventrolateral brainstem and posterior fossa through an extended endoscopic endonasal transclival transpetrosal and transcondylar approach. Six human heads were used for the dissection process. The arterial and venous systems were injected with red- and blue-colored latex, respectively. A pre- and postoperative computed tomography (CT) scan was carried out on every head. The endoscopic endonasal transclival approach was extended through an anterior petrosectomy and a medial condylectomy. A three-dimensional model of the approach was reconstructed, using a dedicated software, from the overlapping of the pre- and post-dissection CT imaging of the specimen. An extended endoscopic transclival approach allows to gain access through an extradural anterior petrosectomy and medial condylectomy to the anterolateral surface of the brainstem and the posterior fossa. Two main intradural anatomical corridors can be described: first, between the V cranial nerve in the prepontine cistern and the VII–VIII cranial nerves in the cerebellopontine and cerebellomedullary cistern; second, between the VII–VIII cranial nerves and the IX cranial nerve, in the premedullary cistern. Extending the transclival endoscopic approach by performing an extradural anterior petrosectomy and a medial condylectomy provides a safe and wide exposure of the anterolateral brainstem with feasible surgical corridors around the main neurovascular structures. |
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