Abstract

Endoscopy is known to be a useful adjunct for microvascular decompression (MVD) surgery, assisting observation in blind spots such as Meckel's cave in cases of trigeminal neuralgia (TN) and the root exit zone (REZ) in hemifacial spasm (HFS). However, few reports have discussed the usefulness of endoscopy in relation to individual patient characteristics or preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 109 patients (98 with HFS and 11 with TN, 85 women, median age 55years) who had undergone endoscopically assisted MVD at our institution between 2017 and 2021. The usefulness of endoscopy in individual cases was scored by three neurosurgeons using a grading scale: 2, essential and indispensable; 1, useful and helpful; 0, not necessary. The mean value of the assigned scores was taken as an indicator of "usefulness," and endoscopy was considered to have been "useful" in cases with a score of > 1.0. Endoscopic assistance was judged to have been useful in 69% of the patients. The proportion of patients evaluated as useful was significantly lower for TN (18.2%) than for HFS (74.5%). Patients with superior cerebellar artery compression had significantly lower scores than patients with other vessels. Endoscopy was considered useful in a significantly higher proportion of patients with anatomically complicated offending vessels (bifurcation or strong meandering) in the REZ detected by preoperative MRI (P < 0.005). Endoscopy for MVD is useful for patients with HFS, especially when preoperative MRI shows bifurcation or strongly meandering vessels in the REZ.

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