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Charalampaki, P; Filippi, R; Welschehold, S; Conrad, J; Perneczky, A.
Tumors of the lateral and third ventricle: removal under endoscope-assisted keyhole conditions.
Neurosurgery. 2005; 57(4 Suppl):302-311 Doi: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000176638.86772.2D
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Führende Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
Charalampaki Patra
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Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: Intraventricular tumors usually are managed by approaches and microsurgical techniques that need retraction and dissection of important brain structures. Minimally invasive endoscopic procedures achieve a remarkable alternative to conventional microneurosurgical techniques. Endoscope-assisted microneurosurgery may be a minimally invasive technique with maximally effective treatment. Using the keyhole concept for planning the surgical strategy, the reduction of the brain retraction is achieved, which is one of the main benefits of this technique. METHODS: We treated 35 patients (16 female patients and 19 male patients) with tumors in the lateral (n = 8) and the third (n = 27) ventricle. Patient age at the date of surgery ranged from 5 to 73 years. The follow-up period ranged from 6 to 83 months. The tumors were operated on using transcortical, transcallosal, or suboccipital transtentorial or infratentorial supracerebellar approaches after precise planning of the skin incision, the trephination, and the trajectory to the center of the tumor, performed earlier with a magnetic resonance imaging scan. RESULTS: Total removal of the tumor was achieved in 28 patients (78.5%). In 2 patients (6.5%), recurrent tumor occurred. In 5 patients (15%), parts of the tumors remained because of infiltration of eloquent areas. Overall clinical improvement was achieved in 31 patients (87%). Three patients (10%) were unchanged and 1 patient (3%) deteriorated. CONCLUSION: Endoscope-assisted keyhole neurosurgery seems to be a safe method of removing tumors in all regions inside the ventricular system with a low risk of permanent neurological deficits. The exact surgical corridor planning on the basis of the keyhole strategy offers less traumatic exposure of even deep-seated endoventricular tumors.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Adolescent -
Adult -
Aged -
Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms - surgery
Cerebral Ventricles - pathology
Child - pathology
Child, Preschool - pathology
Craniotomy - methods
Female - methods
Follow-Up Studies - methods
Humans - methods
Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
Male - methods
Medical Illustration - methods
Middle Aged - methods
Neoplasms - surgery
Neuroendoscopy - methods
Neurosurgery - methods
Operating Rooms - methods
Postoperative Complications - methods
Treatment Outcome - methods
Ventriculostomy - methods

Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
Endoscope-assisted neurosurgery
Neuroendoscopy
Ventricular surgery
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