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1.
We report our experience with five lesions exclusively involving the entire cavernous sinus in which an essentially extradural surgical approach was used. There were two cases of cavernous haemangioma, two cases of meningioma and one case of fungal granuloma. The dural cover of the superior orbital fissure, and mandibular and maxillary divisions of the fifth nerve was dissected along with the dura of the lateral wall of the cavernous sinus. The presence of a relatively large intracavernous bulge due to the tumour assisted in this dissection. The contents of the cavernous sinus were exposed from an anterolateral, lateral and inferior approach. Through the corridor available between the splayed out cranial nerves, a radical resection of the tumour was accomplished in each case. The technical advantages of this approach are discussed in light of the anatomy of the dural configuration of the lateral wall of the cavernous sinus.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: The endovascular treatment of carotid-cavernous dural fistulae is becoming the prominent treatment modality for these lesions. The intractability of these lesions and their tendency to recur, especially after previous endovascular treatment sessions, exhausts the available routes and tends to present a difficulty in accessing the cavernous sinus. To avoid the risks associated with a direct surgical approach, an alternative, less invasive route to the cavernous sinus using a pretemporal extradural approach is combined with a direct endovascular approach. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 38-year-old woman presented with a history of right visual and ocular symptoms related to a Type D cavernous carotid dural fistula, which was fed by internal carotid and external carotid branches. The fistula was initially treated with embolization of the external carotid arterial supply. After a transient improvement, the patient's visual acuity worsened. A follow-up angiogram showed the major supply from the intracavernous internal carotid branches and draining through the inferior ophthalmic vein. The transvenous route was not accessible. An attempt to cannulate the intracavernous branches was not successful. The combined pretemporal and endovascular approach was then used. INTERVENTION: The pretemporal extradural region of the superior orbital fissure was exposed. Using microsurgical techniques and Doppler flow guidance, the anterior cavernous sinus was cannulated through the orbital venous drainage channels. Using intraoperative angiography, thrombogenic coils were deployed at the level of the fistula. Intraoperative angiography confirmed complete obliteration of the fistula. CONCLUSION: The combined pretemporal (extradural) and endovascular approach to the cavernous sinus is a less invasive alternative for the treatment of intractable carotid-cavernous dural fistulae.  相似文献   

3.
With the increasing frequency of surgical operations to the cavernous sinus greater knowledge of the microanatomy of the cavernous sinus has become necessary. The most frequently seen complications during cavernous sinus surgery involve impairment of cranial nerves. This can occur due to direct damage or ischemia. For these reasons, it is important to know the arterial supplies to the cranial nerves in the cavernous sinus and the anatomy of these branches as well. 15 formaline fixed adult cadavers were used in this study. Before the dissections, the internal carotid artery and vertebral artery were filled with coloured latex on both sides. In this report, the intracavernous branches of internal carotid artery (I.I.C.A.) were identified based on the principles of Nomina Anatomica (1989) and compared with others. In our study we found that the segment of the abducens nerve which lies in Dorello's channel was supplied by the meningeal branch; from the point at which it pierces the cerebellar tentorium, the trochlear nerve is supplied by the tentorial cerebellar artery; the posterior cerebellar artery supplies the proximal segment of the oculomotor nerve that proceeds to the oculomotor triangle. Except for these, all the cranial nerves that were located on the lateral wall of the sinus cavernosus are supplied by the tentorial marginal branch and the branches of the lateral trunk.  相似文献   

4.
An epidermoid tumor inside the Meckel's cave is rare. The symptoms caused by this tumor include trigeminal neuralgia, facial hypesthesia and paresis of the 3rd, 4th and 6th nerves. A case of epidermoid tumor inside Meckel's cave was presented. A 54-year-old female who had complained of 3rd nerve palsy with right facial hypesthesia since 3 years before was referred to our clinic. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed the tumor at Meckel's cave. The tumor removal was performed using the orbito-zygomatic approach. To avoid injury of the internal carotid artery and nerves inside the cavernous sinus, removal of the tumor inside the capsule was carried out leaving the capsule. Postoperatively, the tumor removal was confirmed by MRI and improvement of the 3rd and the 5th nerve palsy was obtained three months after surgery. This case suggests that the capsule of the tumor inside the Meckel's cave should be allowed to remain to avoid injury of the adjacent 4th, 5th and 6th nerves and of the internal carotid artery.  相似文献   

5.
We report a case of orbital plexiform neurofibroma presenting in a 10-year-old boy with von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis. The patient had shown a slow enlargement of exophthalmos of the right eye present since birth, together with multiple café au lait spots on the skin of the trunk. Magnetic resonance (MR) images revealed diffuse and irregular nodular involvement of the retrobulbar nerves within the muscle cone, which was confirmed at the surgery. The tumour extended into the ipsilateral cavernous sinus. We discuss the MR findings as pathognomonic signs of this rare orbital tumour, including its multinodular nature among dispersed intraconal fat tissue, location around the optic nerve, extension through the superior orbital fissure into the cavernous sinus and association with von Recklinghausen disease.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE: Our purpose was to show how difficult it is to diagnose a dural fistula of the cavernous sinus, which is an anomalous arteriovenous shunt within the dura mater extending from meningeal arteries to the cavernous sinus. CASE REPORT: A dural fistula was suspected in four female patients aged between 61 and 80, presenting with a red eye, dilated episcleral veins, exophthalmos and elevated intraocular pressure. A cerebral hyperselective angiography was performed in all cases. RESULTS: The cerebral angiography confirmed the diagnosis of a dural fistula in all cases, showing the early filling of the cavernous sinus followed by the draining vessel (posterior in case n. 4, anterior in cases n degrees 1, 2, 3). Case n degrees 2 was unilateral and cases n. 1, 3, 3 were bilateral. The blood flow was low in all cases. A successful embolization was performed in all patients with resolution of all symptoms. CONCLUSION: The diagnosis of dural fistulas is often difficult because of misleading clinical signs. It is documented by a cerebral angiography showing the feeding vessels and helping to choose either venous or arterial embolization which is the most suitable treatment.  相似文献   

7.
The superior orbital fissure (SOF) is a small (3 x 22 mm), but functionally very important, region. The microsurgical anatomy of the SOF was studied on five adult, formalin-fixed cadavers. The vascular structures of three of them were injected with latex. The SOF contains the third, fourth, and sixth nerves, the ophthalmic branch of the fifth nerve, and the superior orbital vein. It is divided by the two tendons of the lateral rectus muscle: the superior part contains the fourth nerve, the frontal and the lacrimal branches of the ophthalmic division of the fifth nerve, and the superior orbital vein; the inferior part contains the superior and inferior branches of the third, the nasociliary, and the sixth nerves. In regard to surgical access to lesions involving the SOF, the question is often raised as to whether the dissection should be started from the cranial or the orbital side. The following procedure is recommended: 1) frontotemporo-orbital craniotomy; 2) resection of the lesser wing of the sphenoid bone, of the anterior clinoid, and of the superolateral part of the orbital roof and opening of the dura along the Sylvian fissure, with an extension to the frontal lobe and another extension to the temporal lobe; 3) incision of the periorbita in its superolateral part and identification of the frontal nerve; and 4) dissection of the frontal nerve in an anteroposterior direction. The fourth nerve will be found medially and inferiorly to the frontal nerve. The third nerve will be found inferomedially to the frontal nerve in the SOF, and the sixth nerve will be found inferiorly to the inferior branch of the third nerve.  相似文献   

8.
A series of 15 patients who underwent neurosurgical procedures for recurrent spheno-orbital meningioma is reported. There were 11 women and four men, with a mean age of 46 years. The mean duration between the first and second operations was 46 months. Progressive proptosis without neurological deficit was the most common symptom. All tumors were large at the time of reoperation and involved the greater and lesser wings of the sphenoid bone and the orbit. Aggressive resection in all patients resulted in no deaths and only slight morbidity, with the exception of one patient who developed blindness 24 hours after surgery due to central retinal artery occlusion. Fourteen patients were improved cosmetically and one patient, treated early in the series, had persistent proptosis due to inadequate bone removal. No attempt was made to remove tumor within the cavernous sinus in patients who were neurologically normal. Although postoperative imaging demonstrated complete gross excision of tumor in nine patients, 10 underwent conventional radiation therapy for residual tumor visualized at the time of surgery in the dura of the superior orbital fissure, the cavernous sinus, or the basal optic canal. Although this study is inconclusive and requires further long-term documentation, no recurrences have been seen to date in the follow-up period, ranging from 16 to 95 months. The following important points are discussed: 1) the failure by experienced surgeons to radically excise bone, tumor, and involved dura at the first operation; 2) the importance of early aggressive therapy, depending upon the patient's age and medical condition; 3) the almost invariable intracranial dural involvement, which at times was seen only by gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging and not visualized on computerized tomography; 4) an illustrated stepwise surgical technique for complete resection through a small craniotomy without the need for complicated reconstruction of the orbit or temporal fossa; 5) the role of radiation therapy when removal is incomplete or deemed hazardous because of cavernous sinus involvement; and 6) the excellent cosmetic results possible with minimal morbidity and no mortality.  相似文献   

9.
10.
We compared MRI studies of the sellar area and embryological and adult histological studies of the cavernous sinuses and pituitary fossa. MRI studies were performed in 50 normal subjects with coronal sections using a fast inversion-recovery sequence to demonstrate the dural walls of the cavernous sinus and pituitary fossa. With this sequence, dura mater appears as a high-signal linear structure. The lateral and superior walls of the cavernous sinus was easily identified on all studies, but demonstration of a dural wall separating the cavernous sinus from the pituitary fossa was not possible. These results correlated well with embryological and adult histological studies obtained from 14 specimens. The absence of a strong separation between the pituitary fossa and the cavernous sinus explains the high incidence of extension of pituitary tumours to the cavernous sinuses and vice versa.  相似文献   

11.
En bloc resection of the temporal bone for squamous cell carcinoma of the middle ear was performed by the postauricular transtemporal and retromastoid approaches. The patient was a 70-year-old woman whose tumor extended to the middle and posterior cranial fossae. Temporal and retromastoid craniotomies were carried out, then the temporal dura and the cerebellar dura, and the transverse and sigmoid sinuses were exposed. The temporal dura and the cerebellar dura were opened, and the transverse sinus was ligated at the junction with the sigmoid sinus. After that, the tentorial dura was incised, the incision extending anteriorly to the middle cranial fossa and transecting the superior petrosal sinus. Consequently, a wide view into the middle and the posterior cranial fossae was obtained. In the posterior fossa, cranial nerves VII and VIII were divided. On the other hand, nerves IX, X and XI were preserved at the dural incision on the posterior surface of the temporal bone. Subsequently, in the area of the carotid canal, the temporal bone was drilled toward the medial side of the internal auditory canal and also posteriorly down to the jugular bulb. At this stage, the temporal bone and the soft tissue attachments, such as the middle and posterior cranial fossa dura, and the sigmoid sinus, were separated from the pyramidal apex and the clivus. The dural defect was repaired with a free pericranial graft. A rectus abdominis muscle flap was transferred to reconstruct the defect of the skull base resulting from the temporal bone resection. Postoperative complications like CSF leakage, meningitis and lower cranial nerve damage, were not seen after the treatment. The patient has shown no evidence of recurrence for the 28 months since the surgical treatment, and has not complained of any problems with swallowing or conducting conversations in daily life. With the contribution of recent developments in skull base and reconstruction surgery, more aggressive en bloc resection of the temporal bone can be carried out on patients with advanced middle ear carcinoma. These developments will also make it possible for patients whose prognosis was previously thought to be poor to have a chance for a cure.  相似文献   

12.
Here we present a 53-year-old woman with rheumatoid pachymeningitis. The subject had rheumatoid arthritis (RA) for 15 years. In April, 1996 she began to experience intermittent headaches. In September, her headaches became severe and continuous. In October, she suddenly developed ptosis of the left eye and diplopia. She also started to have dysphagia and she found it increasingly difficult to eat. She was admitted to our hospital on November 1, 1996. Neurological examinations revealed palsies of the left IIIrd, IVth, and VIth, and bilateral IXth, and Xth cranial nerves. Laboratory findings showed leukocytosis, elevated blood sedimentation rate, and positive CRP. Serum RA titer was positive (30x). The cerebrospinal fluid was normal and bacteriological examination was negative. T1-weighted MRI demonstrated hypertrophic cranial dura extending from the falx cerebri to tentorium cerebelli, which was enhanced markedly by Gd-DTPA. The dura adjacent to the cavernous sinus and the clivus were also thickened, which probably caused her cranial polyneuropathies. The dural biopsy showed massive infiltration of the inflammatory cells throughout the dura, proliferation of collagen fibers, and necrotic granuloma with neutrophilic infiltrations. Neither rheumatoid nodules, nor vasculitis were found. Despite the absence of rheumatoid nodules in the dural biopsy, the clinical features, pathologic specimens, and MRI findings of the thickened dura were most consistent with rheumatoid pachymeningitis. Administration of dexamethason ameliorated her headache on the 4th hospital day, and the cranial polyneuropathies completely disappeared on the 35th hospital day. The dural enhancement previously seen on the contrast T1-weighted MRI was diminished. Serum RA titer was also normalized (10x). Rheumatoid pachymeningitis is an extremely rare disease, and only 16 cases were reported in the literatures. Hypertrophic pachymeningitis should be considered as a diagnostic possibility in RA patients who have prolonged headache, and Gd-DTPA MRI is recommended to demonstrate the dural involvement.  相似文献   

13.
Effect of cycling position on ventilatory and metabolic variables   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tumors of the orbital apex are difficult to approach through a standard lateral orbitotomy exposure. The transcranial approach has been described, but it requires an open craniotomy as well as dissection through the annulus of Zinn in its tight superior segment to reach intraconal and inferior lateral tumors. It is well recognized that the transcranial approach is optimal only for tumors of the superomedial orbital apex. Our study demonstrates that by enlarging the bony incision of a classic lateral orbitotomy to include a generous marginotomy and removing the deep sphenoid wing up to the superior orbital fissure, good exposure of the lateral orbital apex can be obtained. Tumors of the apex, including those that extend slightly into the cavernous sinus, can be removed from the cranial nerves and extraocular muscle origins in en face fashion, providing optimal ability to identify the delicate neurovascular structures of the orbital apex and avoid damage to them. The operating microscope is extremely useful for bony and soft tissue dissection. We report four benign tumors of the orbital apex removed using this approach. Two tumors encroached slightly into the cavernous sinus. Three of four patients were told that they had inoperable tumors. By use of the deep orbital apex approach described, all four tumors were successfully exposed and removed. Visual and motor function was unchanged or improved in all four patients, with the exception of one tumor that incorporated the inferior division of the third cranial nerve; in that patient, the transected nerve was anastomosed microscopically, and partial return of function was noted. The transorbital ophthalmic approach to tumors of the inferolateral orbital apex has significant potential advantages in comparison with a frontal craniotomy approach.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Cranial and orbitocranial penetration by organic foreign material is not infrequent. It is important to identify whether penetration has occurred and to localize and remove the organic foreign material. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: We report a 15-month-old patient who suffered orbitocranial penetration with the stem of a fern. The stem passed through the orbit, exiting via the superior orbital fissure. It continued through the middle cranial fossa to end in the posterior cranial fossa. INTERVENTION: The patient underwent surgery, and a modified Dolenc procedure was performed. The foreign body was identified in the prepontine cistern and was removed. An extradural approach was performed to the cavernous sinus and superior orbital fissure, and the remaining foreign body was removed. CONCLUSION: Retained intracranial wood should be removed. The radiological diagnosis can be difficult, and magnetic resonance imaging is the investigation of choice. Magnetic resonance imaging may not detect some cases of organic foreign material penetration.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Originally, the authors used a combined transcranial-transmalar approach for removal of sphenoorbital tumors. METHODS: More recently, when computed tomography (CT) scanning became available, surgical management of sphenoorbital meningiomas included resection of the hyperostosis in the pterional region, orbital roof and lateral wall, and middle fossa floor. Thereafter, intradural and intraorbital components are removed, as well as infiltrated dura mater. Finally, a periosteal flap is placed over the dural defect and bone reconstructed with methylmethacrylate. RESULTS: Of 25 patients, there was only one death and all but one showed very good to moderate response to treatment. Four recurrences were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Surgical management cannot be uniform in all cases, but must be adapted to each form of presentation. On the basis of the satisfactory results achieved, we feel justified in advising the technique described above with its current modifications.  相似文献   

16.
The authors studied the microsurgical anatomy of the suboccipital region, concentrating on the third segment (V3) of the vertebral artery (VA), which extends from the transverse foramen of the axis to the dural penetration of the VA, paying particular attention to its loops, branches, supporting fibrous rings, adjacent nerves, and surrounding venous structures. Ten cadaver heads (20 sides) were fixed in formalin, their blood vessels were perfused with colored silicone rubber, and they were dissected under magnification. The authors subdivided the V3 into two parts, the horizontal (V3h) and the vertical (V3v), and studied the anatomical structures topographically, from the superficial to the deep tissues. In two additional specimens, serial histological sections were acquired through the V3 and its encircling elements to elucidate their cross-sectional anatomy. Measurements of surgically and clinically important features were obtained with the aid of an operating microscope. This study reveals an astonishing anatomical resemblance between the suboccipital complex and the cavernous sinus, as follows: venous cushioning; anatomical properties of the V3 and those of the petrous-cavernous internal carotid artery (ICA), namely their loops, branches, supporting fibrous rings, and periarterial autonomic neural plexus; adjacent nerves; and skull base locations. Likewise, a review of the literature showed a related embryological development and functional and pathological features, as well as similar transitional patterns in the arterial walls of the V3 and the petrous-cavernous ICA. Hence, due to its similarity to the cavernous sinus, this suboccipital complex is here named the "suboccipital cavernous sinus." Its role in physiological and pathological conditions as they pertain to various clinical and surgical implications is also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
T Kinjo  J Mukawa  H Koga  T Shingaki 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1997,40(3):615-7; discussion 617-8
OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: A patient with an extensive cranial base meningioma that included bilateral invasion of Meckel's cave underwent surgical resection and had an unexpected rare complication, malocclusion from bilateral trigeminal dysfunction. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 19-year-old male patient was admitted to our hospital with alternating painful ophthalmoplegia. He had been blind since the age of 10 years. At the time of admission, neurological findings included bilateral visual loss and optic atrophy. Magnetic resonance images showed an extensive tumor located at the planum sphenoidale, tuberculum sellae, and bilaterally at Meckel's cave and the medial tentorial incisura. INTERVENTION: The patient underwent a two-stage operation. During the first procedure, the masses in the planum sphenoidale, tuberculum sellae, and the left side of Meckel's cave were excised intradurally. At the second operation, the mass in the right side of Meckel's cave was excised extradurally and the tentorial mass was removed intradurally. The patient's postoperative course was complicated by bilateral trigeminal nerve dysfunction, which caused malocclusion. CONCLUSION: Bilateral dysfunction of the trigeminal nerve may cause a number of problems. Thus, extreme caution must be taken to preserve the function of this nerve.  相似文献   

18.
PURPOSE: Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) frequently spreads intracranially. We compare CT and MRI in identifying intracranial spread and reexamine the route of infiltration. METHOD: One hundred fourteen consecutive patients with proven NPC were evaluated prospectively with T1-, T2-weighted, contrast-enhanced MRI and CT. RESULTS: MRI showed 35 (31%) patients with middle cranial fossa involvement. Twenty-nine (25%) patients had cavernous sinus infiltration, while six (5%) showed only dural thickening. The most common route of spread is through the foramen ovale (FO) (12/35 patients, 34%), followed by skull base destruction (6/35 patients, 17%), foramen lacerum (FL) (6/35 patients, 17%), sphenoid sinus (6/35 patients, 17%), and combined FO and FL (5/35 patients, 14%). Using MRI as a standard, CT demonstrated the following involvement: cavernous sinus in 26 of 29 (90%) patients, FO in 9 of 12 patients, skull base in 6 of 6 patients, FO and FL in 3 of 5 patients, FL in 6 of 6 patients, sphenoid sinus in 6 of 6 patients and dura in 0 of 18 patients. CONCLUSION: It is believed that NPC most commonly spreads intracranially via the FL or by direct erosion. Perineural spread through the FO is an important route, which explains why with CT evidence of cavernous sinus involvement there may be no skull base erosion. These findings are best seen on MRI.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Cavernous carotid aneurysms are generally benign entities. Certain indications exist for their treatment, however, including transient ischemic events, subarachnoid hemorrhage or risk of subarachnoid hemorrhage, epistaxis or its risk, ophthalmoplegia, pain, and progressive visual loss. We feel certain angiographic features may indicate a greater likelihood that cavernous carotid aneurysms extend into the subarachnoid space, thus making their rupture a life-threatening event. METHODS: A case report of an intracavernous carotid aneurysm, which at surgery extended into the subarachnoid space, is described. RESULTS: In this particular case, deformation of the aneurysm (waisting) as seen at angiography was in retrospect an indication that the cavernous carotid aneurysm extended into the subarachnoid space, either through the dural ring or through the eroded dural roof of the cavernous sinus. This finding was verified at surgery when the lesion was explored and trapped. CONCLUSION: Angiographic waisting of a cavernous carotid aneurysm may indicate that the aneurysm extends into the subarachnoid space. Such extension means that rupture would be a life-threatening event. While deformation of the aneurysm may be secondary to compression against the optic nerve or anterior clinoid process with an intact layer of dura overlying the aneurysm, the neurosurgeon confronted with such findings should analyze such lesions carefully and consider surgical exploration.  相似文献   

20.
HM Spinelli  S Falcone  G Lee 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1994,33(4):377-83; discussion 384
Carotid-cavernous fistulas are abnormal communications between the internal carotid artery and the cavernous sinus produced by a rupture of the wall of the carotid artery or one of its branches into the sinus. Extradural branches of the internal or external carotid arteries may communicate with the cavernous sinus, producing proptosis, progressive glaucoma, and ocular vascular engorgement. Various approaches to obliterate these fistulas have evolved, many of which carry high morbidity or are precluded by anatomical considerations. Analysis of the venous anatomy of the orbit and face, including human cadaver dissections, reveals a new and safe approach to the cavernous sinus, requiring microsurgical isolation and cannulation of the superior ophthalmic vein through an anterior orbital approach. Selective embolization of a carotid-cavernous fistula can be performed successfully through this route. We present pertinent anatomy and technical considerations and the successful clinical application of these principles. Surgeons familiar with craniofacial anatomy and microvascular techniques can apply these principles and play an active role in the treatment of these complex problems.  相似文献   

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