Abstract

Currently, surgical obliterations are a mainstay for treating dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF) in the anterior cranial fossa (ACF), which has high risks of hemorrhage and functional disorder. By introducing an endoscope into a high frontal approach and utilizing its advantages, we attempted to establish it as a new surgical procedure that eliminates the drawbacks of various approaches that have been used to date. By using 30 clinical datasets of venous-phase head computed tomography angiogram, measurements and comparisons on a 3-dimensional workstation were performed to identify the appropriate positioning of keyhole craniotomy for endoscope-controlled high frontal approach (EHFA). Based on these data, a cadaver-based surgery was simulated to verify the feasibility of EHFA and develop an efficient procedure. In EHFA, though raising the position of the keyhole craniotomy made the operative field deeper, significant advantages were obtained in the angle between the operative axis and the medial-anterior cranial base and the amount of bone removal required at the anterior edge of craniotomy. Minimally invasive EHFA, performed through a keyhole craniotomy without opening the frontal sinus, proved to be feasible on 10 sides of 5 cadaver heads. Moreover, 3 patients with DAVF in ACF were successfully treated by clipping the fistula via EHFA. EHFA, which provided a direct corridor to the medial ACF at the level of the foramen cecum and crista galli and the minimum necessary operative field, was found to be a suitable procedure for clipping the fistula of DAVF in ACF.

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