Mohammad Taghvaei1,2, Sara Fallah1,2, Shokufeh Sadaghiani2, Seyed Mousa Sadrhosseini3, Azin Tabari3, Mohammadreza Fathi1,2, Mehdi Zeinalizadeh4,5. 1. Brain and Spinal Injury Research Center (BASIR), Neuroscience Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Keshavarz Blvd, P. O. Box 1419733141, Tehran, Iran. 2. Department of Neurological Surgery, Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. 3. Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. 4. Brain and Spinal Injury Research Center (BASIR), Neuroscience Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Keshavarz Blvd, P. O. Box 1419733141, Tehran, Iran. mzeinalizadeh@tums.ac.ir. 5. Department of Neurological Surgery, Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. mzeinalizadeh@tums.ac.ir.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Endoscopic techniques have been widely applied for challenging cranial base surgeries in recent years. In this study, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of using the endoscopic endo-nasal route for various skull base pathologies in terms of postoperative complications. METHODS: A total of 584 consecutive patients who underwent endoscopic skull base surgery were studied. Peri- and post-operative complications and risk factors affecting the occurrence of these complications were evaluated. RESULTS: 648 endoscopic skull base surgical procedures were performed on 584 patients (47.8% females and 52.2% males) with the mean age of 41.2 years. Pituitary adenoma (69.3%) was the most common pathology. Post-operative mortality was 2.0%. The rates of post-operative permanent neurological deficit (one case of 6th nerve injury, two 12th nerve injuries and one hemiparesis) and visual deterioration were 0.6% and 1.5%, respectively. Ten patients (1.7%) were complicated with meningitis and it was the cause of death in 3. Systemic complications not directly attributable to skull base surgical access occurred in 2% (11 patients) with 5 mortalities. The rate of intra-operative vascular injury was 1% and among them one patient died due to PCA injury. The most common post-operative complications were diabetes insipidus (12.5%), anterior pituitary dysfunction (10.6%) and CSF leak (3.6%), respectively. In general, reoperation, malignant lesions, and level IV of surgical complexity were associated with a higher incidence of complications. CONCLUSION: Endoscopic endo-nasal approach can be a safe and less-morbid first-line treatment of patients with various skull base lesions.
PURPOSE: Endoscopic techniques have been widely applied for challenging cranial base surgeries in recent years. In this study, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of using the endoscopic endo-nasal route for various skull base pathologies in terms of postoperative complications. METHODS: A total of 584 consecutive patients who underwent endoscopic skull base surgery were studied. Peri- and post-operative complications and risk factors affecting the occurrence of these complications were evaluated. RESULTS: 648 endoscopic skull base surgical procedures were performed on 584 patients (47.8% females and 52.2% males) with the mean age of 41.2 years. Pituitary adenoma (69.3%) was the most common pathology. Post-operative mortality was 2.0%. The rates of post-operative permanent neurological deficit (one case of 6th nerve injury, two 12th nerve injuries and one hemiparesis) and visual deterioration were 0.6% and 1.5%, respectively. Ten patients (1.7%) were complicated with meningitis and it was the cause of death in 3. Systemic complications not directly attributable to skull base surgical access occurred in 2% (11 patients) with 5 mortalities. The rate of intra-operative vascular injury was 1% and among them one patient died due to PCA injury. The most common post-operative complications were diabetes insipidus (12.5%), anterior pituitary dysfunction (10.6%) and CSF leak (3.6%), respectively. In general, reoperation, malignant lesions, and level IV of surgical complexity were associated with a higher incidence of complications. CONCLUSION: Endoscopic endo-nasal approach can be a safe and less-morbid first-line treatment of patients with various skull base lesions.
Authors: Enrico de Divitiis; Felice Esposito; Paolo Cappabianca; Luigi M Cavallo; Oreste de Divitiis Journal: Neurosurgery Date: 2008-03 Impact factor: 4.654
Authors: Andrew Conger; Fan Zhao; Xiaowen Wang; Amalia Eisenberg; Chester Griffiths; Felice Esposito; Ricardo L Carrau; Garni Barkhoudarian; Daniel F Kelly Journal: J Neurosurg Date: 2018-05-11 Impact factor: 5.115