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Research Article

Interdural extra-arachnoidal resection of fifth nerve schwannomas with tailored petrous drilling: Eliminating the blind spot

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Received 25 Mar 2024, Accepted 28 May 2024, Published online: 15 Jun 2024
 

Abstract

Background and objectives

Around 20-40% of trigeminal schwannomas (TS) are dumbbell shaped, spanning the middle and posterior cranial fossa The petrous apex is often truncated in these patients, aiding surgical resection of both compartments through the middle fossa approach. However, a less eroded petrous creates a blind spot, making total resection difficult. This study describes the feasibility of an approach combining expanded Meckel cave access with tailored petrous bone drilling to optimize tumor visualization and resection.

Methods

Eleven patients with dumbbell TS and minimal petrous apex erosion underwent the described surgery. Surgical steps included temporo-orbito-zygomatic craniotomy, middle fossa floor drilling, navigation aided (tailored) extradural petrous bone drilling and extra-arachnoidal tumor excision. Extent of resection and postoperative outcomes were recorded.

Results

Patients presented with trigeminal nerve dysfunction (n = 9; sensory −9 and motor − 5), headache(8/11), ataxia (7/11) and pseudobulbar palsy (3/11). Complete tumor resection was achieved in all patients. Postoperatively, 8 out of 9 patients had transient increase in facial hypoesthesia with conjunctival injection in 3. It improved within 3-6 months, except in four cases wherein mild hypoesthesia persisted. Motor symptoms improved in 2 of 5 patients. Two developed transient 6th nerve paresis, that resolved in 2 months. Cerebellar and brainstem pressure symptoms resolved in all. No patients developed new onset permanent neurological deficit. Two patients reported mild post-craniotomy masticatory difficulty.

Conclusions

The additional tailored petrous bony drilling enhances the surgeon’s view, allowing a higher chance of total resection with no major operative morbidity.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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