BACKGROUND: Schwannomas of the parasellar region may arise from the trigeminal, oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nerves. OBJECTIVE: To define the tumor origin, location, and dural relationship (extradural vs extra-intradural vs cisternal) on preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in order to plan the best surgical approach (purely extradural vs extra-intradural). METHODS: Twenty-four patients with parasellar schwannomas who underwent surgery were retrospectively analyzed. Twenty arose from the trigeminal nerve (7 intracavernous and 13 within the Meckel's cave), 3 from the oculomotor nerve, and 1 from the abducens nerve. The preoperative identification of the tumor location (extradural vs extra-intradural vs cisternal) and the nerve of origin was defined on MR sequences. All patients were operated on through a pterional approach (extradural or extra-intradural route). RESULTS: The tumor location was correctly defined on MRI in 22 out of 24 cases (92%) and the nerve of origin in 22 (92%). An extradural approach without intradural exploration was performed in all 5 intracavernous trigeminal schwannomas, in 11 out of 13 of the Meckel's cave, and in 2 schwannomas of the oculomotor nerve. Two schwannomas of the Meckel's cave with transgression of the medial dural wall, 1 of the oculomotor nerve, and the abducens nerve schwannoma required an extra-intradural approach. Complete tumor resection was obtained in 19 out of 24 cases (80%). CONCLUSION: The pterional extradural approach is sufficient for Dolenc type I and II trigeminal schwannomas, excepting for those transgressing the inner dural layer. Schwannomas of the oculomotor and abducens nerves with cisternal location require an extradural-intradural approach.

Parasellar Schwannomas: Extradural vs Extra-Intradural Surgical Approach

Caranci, Ferdinando;
2018

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Schwannomas of the parasellar region may arise from the trigeminal, oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nerves. OBJECTIVE: To define the tumor origin, location, and dural relationship (extradural vs extra-intradural vs cisternal) on preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in order to plan the best surgical approach (purely extradural vs extra-intradural). METHODS: Twenty-four patients with parasellar schwannomas who underwent surgery were retrospectively analyzed. Twenty arose from the trigeminal nerve (7 intracavernous and 13 within the Meckel's cave), 3 from the oculomotor nerve, and 1 from the abducens nerve. The preoperative identification of the tumor location (extradural vs extra-intradural vs cisternal) and the nerve of origin was defined on MR sequences. All patients were operated on through a pterional approach (extradural or extra-intradural route). RESULTS: The tumor location was correctly defined on MRI in 22 out of 24 cases (92%) and the nerve of origin in 22 (92%). An extradural approach without intradural exploration was performed in all 5 intracavernous trigeminal schwannomas, in 11 out of 13 of the Meckel's cave, and in 2 schwannomas of the oculomotor nerve. Two schwannomas of the Meckel's cave with transgression of the medial dural wall, 1 of the oculomotor nerve, and the abducens nerve schwannoma required an extra-intradural approach. Complete tumor resection was obtained in 19 out of 24 cases (80%). CONCLUSION: The pterional extradural approach is sufficient for Dolenc type I and II trigeminal schwannomas, excepting for those transgressing the inner dural layer. Schwannomas of the oculomotor and abducens nerves with cisternal location require an extradural-intradural approach.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11591/422290
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