Abstract

In this 2-year retrospective analysis, 13 patients with fourth ventricle lesions who underwent microsurgical resection via the midline suboccipital keyhole telovelar approach were analyzed. This is the first study to investigate the surgical outcome and complications of using this approach to resect various types of lesions in the fourth ventricle. We aimed to clarify whether this approach has met its promise of lesion dissection. Three patients (23.1%) had intraoperative extraventricular drains. There were no immediate postoperative deaths. Gross total resection was achieved in 84.6% of the cases. The Fisher exact test showed there was no statistically significant correlation between lesion location, lesion size, brainstem invasion, and extent of resection. About two third (69.2%) of the cases were free of complications. New or worsening gait/focal motor disturbance (15.4%) was the most common neurological deficit in the immediate postoperative period. One patient (7.7%) had worse gait disturbance/motor deficit following surgical intervention. Two patients (15.4%) developed meningitis. Two patients (15.4%) required postoperative cerebrospinal fluid diversion after tumor resection, of these 2 patients, 1 (7.7%) eventually needed a permanent shunt. There were no cases of cerebellar mutism and bulbar paralysis. The median suboccipital keyhole telovelar approach provides relative wide access to resect most fourth ventricle tumors completely and with satisfactory results. In contrast, this requires the appropriate patient selection and skilled surgeons.

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