This is a case of a 60-year-old male with a history of prior left middle fossa meningioma that was partially resected with an operative report noting diffuse attachment to the middle fossa floor. Gamma knife was recom...This is a case of a 60-year-old male with a history of prior left middle fossa meningioma that was partially resected with an operative report noting diffuse attachment to the middle fossa floor. Gamma knife was recommended but he never completed this management. He then presented about eight years later with a mass from his left external auditory canal. It was reported that two years prior another surgeon operated on the left ear for a cholesteatoma. CT temporal bone showed complete opacification of left EAC, mastoid bowl, and remaining mastoid air cells. In addition, there were irregular bony/hyperostotic changes seen within the left sphenoid and temporal bone. There was dural thickening within the middle fossa adjacent to the previously described hyperostotic bony changes. A mastoidectomy and excision of mass revealed extensive adhesive tissue throughout the middle ear, and mastoid up to the tegmen. Pathology of the portions that were resected confirmed Grade 1 meningioma. Stereotactic gamma knife radiation was completed to the area to prevent further growth. This case highlights extracranial meningioma that did not have definitive management for prior middle fossa floor meningioma. It also highlights the need to think of less common pathology in the middle ear and external auditory canal.展开更多
Background: Until recently, tumors of the clivus and the anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa were considered extremely difficult to access and often inoperable using standard transcranial approaches. With t...Background: Until recently, tumors of the clivus and the anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa were considered extremely difficult to access and often inoperable using standard transcranial approaches. With the introduction into the neurosurgical practice of minimally invasive methods utilizing endoscopic techniques, it became possible to effectively remove hard-to-reach tumors, including central tumors of the anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa. Methods: From 2008 to the present time, the inpatient institution has operated on 140 patients with various tumors of the base of the skull, localized to the clivus and anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa (65 men and 75 women). The age of patients ranged from 3 to 74 years. Tumor distribution according to the histopathological features was as follows: chordomas, 103 (73.57%);meningiomas, 12 (8.57%);pituitary adenomas, 9 (6.43%);fibrous dysplasia, 4 (2.86%);cholesteatoma, 3 (2.14%);craniopharyngiomas, 2 (1.43%);plasmacytomas, 2 (1.43%);and other tumors (giant cell tumor, neurohypophyseal glioma, osteoma, carcinoid, chondroma), 5 (3.57%). The tumors had the following size distribution: giant (more than 60 mm), 35 (25%);large (35–59 mm), 83 (59.3%);medium (21–35 mm), 21 (15%);and small (less than 20 mm), 1 (0.7%). In 11 cases, intraoperative monitoring of the cranial nerves was performed (21 cranial nerves were identified). Results: Upper, middle, and lower transclival approaches provide access to the anterior surface of the upper, middle, and lower neurovascular complexes of the posterior cranial fossa. The chordoma cases were distributed as follows according to extent of removal: total removal, 68 (66.02%);subtotal removal, 25 (24.27%);and partial removal, 10 (9.71%). The adenomas of the pituitary gland were removed totally in 6 cases, subtotally in 1 case and partially in 2 cases. The meningiomas were removed totally in 1 case, subtotally in 5 cases, and partially in 5 cases, with less than 50% of the tumor removed in 1 case. Other tumo展开更多
文摘This is a case of a 60-year-old male with a history of prior left middle fossa meningioma that was partially resected with an operative report noting diffuse attachment to the middle fossa floor. Gamma knife was recommended but he never completed this management. He then presented about eight years later with a mass from his left external auditory canal. It was reported that two years prior another surgeon operated on the left ear for a cholesteatoma. CT temporal bone showed complete opacification of left EAC, mastoid bowl, and remaining mastoid air cells. In addition, there were irregular bony/hyperostotic changes seen within the left sphenoid and temporal bone. There was dural thickening within the middle fossa adjacent to the previously described hyperostotic bony changes. A mastoidectomy and excision of mass revealed extensive adhesive tissue throughout the middle ear, and mastoid up to the tegmen. Pathology of the portions that were resected confirmed Grade 1 meningioma. Stereotactic gamma knife radiation was completed to the area to prevent further growth. This case highlights extracranial meningioma that did not have definitive management for prior middle fossa floor meningioma. It also highlights the need to think of less common pathology in the middle ear and external auditory canal.
文摘Background: Until recently, tumors of the clivus and the anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa were considered extremely difficult to access and often inoperable using standard transcranial approaches. With the introduction into the neurosurgical practice of minimally invasive methods utilizing endoscopic techniques, it became possible to effectively remove hard-to-reach tumors, including central tumors of the anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa. Methods: From 2008 to the present time, the inpatient institution has operated on 140 patients with various tumors of the base of the skull, localized to the clivus and anterior region of the posterior cranial fossa (65 men and 75 women). The age of patients ranged from 3 to 74 years. Tumor distribution according to the histopathological features was as follows: chordomas, 103 (73.57%);meningiomas, 12 (8.57%);pituitary adenomas, 9 (6.43%);fibrous dysplasia, 4 (2.86%);cholesteatoma, 3 (2.14%);craniopharyngiomas, 2 (1.43%);plasmacytomas, 2 (1.43%);and other tumors (giant cell tumor, neurohypophyseal glioma, osteoma, carcinoid, chondroma), 5 (3.57%). The tumors had the following size distribution: giant (more than 60 mm), 35 (25%);large (35–59 mm), 83 (59.3%);medium (21–35 mm), 21 (15%);and small (less than 20 mm), 1 (0.7%). In 11 cases, intraoperative monitoring of the cranial nerves was performed (21 cranial nerves were identified). Results: Upper, middle, and lower transclival approaches provide access to the anterior surface of the upper, middle, and lower neurovascular complexes of the posterior cranial fossa. The chordoma cases were distributed as follows according to extent of removal: total removal, 68 (66.02%);subtotal removal, 25 (24.27%);and partial removal, 10 (9.71%). The adenomas of the pituitary gland were removed totally in 6 cases, subtotally in 1 case and partially in 2 cases. The meningiomas were removed totally in 1 case, subtotally in 5 cases, and partially in 5 cases, with less than 50% of the tumor removed in 1 case. Other tumo