Literature DB >> 20440629

The first 50s: can we achieve acceptable results in vestibular schwannoma surgery from the beginning?

Florian Roser1, Marcos S Tatagiba.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Vestibular schwannoma surgery requires a profound knowledge of anatomy and long-standing experience of surgical skull base techniques, as patients nowadays requests high-quality results from any surgeon. This educes a dilemma for the young neurosurgeon as she/he is at the beginning of a learning curve. The presented series should prove if surgical results of young skull base surgeons are comparable respecting carefully planned educational steps.
METHODS: The first 50 vestibular schwannomas of the first author were retrospectively evaluated concerning morbidity and mortality with an emphasis on functional cranial nerve preservation. The results were embedded in a timeline of educational steps starting with the internship in 1999.
RESULTS: Fifty vestibular schwannomas were consecutively operated from July 2007 to January 2010. According to the Hannover Classification, 14% were rated as T1, 18% as T2, 46% as T3, and 21% as T4. The overall facial nerve preservation rate was 96%. Seventy-nine percent of patients with T1-T3 tumours had no facial palsy at all and 15% had an excellent recovery of an initial palsy grade 3 according to the House & Brackman scale within the first 3 months after surgery. Hearing preservation in T1/2 schwannomas was achieved in 66%, in patients with T3 tumours in 56%, and in large T4 tumours in 25%. Three patients suffered a cerebrospinal fluid fistula (6%), and one patient died during the perioperative period due to cardiopulmonary problems (2%).
CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate that with careful established educational plans in skull base surgery, excellent clinical and functional results can be achieved even by young neurosurgeons.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20440629     DOI: 10.1007/s00701-010-0672-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Neurochir (Wien)        ISSN: 0001-6268            Impact factor:   2.216


  2 in total

1.  Early-Career Surgical Practice for Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors in the Era of Radiosurgery.

Authors:  Giannantonio Spena; Tommaso Sorrentino; Roberto Altieri; Luca Redaelli de Zinis; Roberto Stefini; Pier Paolo Panciani; Marco Fontanella
Journal:  J Neurol Surg B Skull Base       Date:  2017-11-01

2.  Does attempt at hearing preservation microsurgery of vestibular schwannoma affect postoperative tinnitus?

Authors:  Martin Chovanec; Eduard Zvěřina; Oliver Profant; Zuzana Balogová; Jan Kluh; Josef Syka; Jiří Lisý; Ilja Merunka; Jiří Skřivan; Jan Betka
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2015-01-12       Impact factor: 3.411

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.