Abstract

BackgroundIntracranial vestibular schwannoma still remain to be difficulty for its unique microsurgical technique and preservation of neuro-function, as well as reducing common complications that may arise in surgery.MethodsWe consecutively enrolled 657 unilateral giant (>4 cm diameter) vestibular schwannoma patients treated in Huashan Hospital via the suboccipital retrosigmoid approach in the past 16 years. The extension of tumor removal, surgical mortality, facial nerve function, hearing, and the other main short and long-term complications were the studied parameters.ResultsGross total resection was performed in 556 patients (84.6%); near-total resection was achieved in 99 patients (15.1%). The mortality rate is 0.6%. The main short-term complications included ‘new’ deafness (47.6%), intracranial infection (7.6%), lower cranial nerve defects (7.5%) and pneumonia (6.2%). The facial nerve was preserved anatomically in 589 cases (89.7%). Good facial nerve functional outcome (House-Brackmann Grades I and II) postoperatively was achieved in 216 patients (32.9%). Other 308 cases (46.9%) were House-Brackmann grade III, and 133 patients (20.2%) were House-Brackmann grade IV–VI. Follow-up data were available for 566 of the 657 patients (86.1%). The common long-term complications were hearing loss (85.2%), facial paralysis (HB grade IV–VI, 24.4%) and facial numbness (15.7%).ConclusionsTrends in the data lead the authors to suggest that the microsurgical technique, intraoperative nerve monitoring, and multidisciplinary cooperation, were the keys to improving prognostic outcomes in giant intracranial vestibular schwannoma patients.

Highlights

  • Intracranial vestibular schwannoma still remain to be difficulty for its unique microsurgical technique and preservation of neuro-function, as well as reducing common complications that may arise in surgery

  • The giant vestibular schwannoma still remains to be the difficulty for the surgical treatment of intracranial vestibular schwannoma

  • Clinical manifestation All of those 657 patients were noticed some degree of hearing deficit and 248 patients (37.7%) experienced deafness

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Intracranial vestibular schwannoma still remain to be difficulty for its unique microsurgical technique and preservation of neuro-function, as well as reducing common complications that may arise in surgery. Surgical operation would affect the function of cerebellum and brainstem during treatment because of giant tumor, which lead to many complications after surgery. It is still a great challenge for the neurosurgeons to remove tumors totally, preserve neural function, reduce the complications of patients and improve long-term survival quality of life. From 1999 to 2014, 657 cases of giant tumors, which were all resected trans suboccipital retrosigmoid approach, were obtained in our department. After the collection of clinical data, we conducted a retrospective review on clinical symptoms, surgical outcomes, distribution of complications, and their possible causes and preventive measures for the expectation of providing the reference for future clinical treatment

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call