Anatomic teaching has long informed surgical knowledge, experience, and skills. One tool for teaching that emerged during the Renaissance was the fugitive anatomic sheet, which used flap layers to reveal different levels of anatomy. In 1538, Vogtherr introduced the first fugitive sheets, which included illustrations of male and female figures with a torso paper flap that, when lifted, revealed the internal organs in a cartoonish style.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause of the complexity of the brain and its structures, anatomical knowledge is fundamental in neurosurgery. Anatomical dissection, body preservation, and vascular injection remain essential for training, teaching, and refining surgical techniques. This article explores the historical development of these practices and provides the contextual background of modern neurosurgical cadaveric brain models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe contributions of Laurent Princeteau (1858-1932) to anatomy and to the establishment of neurosurgery have largely gone unrecognized, perhaps because he was educated and practiced in a French city other than Paris at a time when Paris was one of the chief centers of medicine in Europe. After completing a thesis describing an iliac artery anomaly and obtaining the distinguished agrégé teaching degree, Princeteau began his surgical career at the University of Bordeaux. Within 10 years, he became chef de clinique and one of the busiest surgeons in Saint-André Hospital, as well as head of the anatomy institute and professor of anatomy at the dental school.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: We assessed types of cadaveric head and brain tissue specimen preparations that are used in a high throughput neurosurgical research laboratory to determine optimal preparation methods for neurosurgical anatomical research, education, and training.
Methods: Cadaveric specimens (N = 112) prepared using different preservation and vascular injection methods were imaged, dissected, and graded by 11 neurosurgeons using a 21-point scale. We assessed the quality of tissue and preservation in both the anterior and posterior circulations.
(1) Background: Jugular foramen tumors are complex lesions due to their relationship with critical neurovascular structures within the skull base. It is necessary to have a deep knowledge of the anatomy of the jugular foramen and its surroundings to understand each type of tumor growth pattern and how it is related to the surrounding neurovascular structures. This scope aims to provide a guide with the primary surgical approaches to the jugular foramen and familiarize the neurosurgeons with the anatomy of the region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objectives: Revascularizing the postcommunicating segment of the anterior cerebral artery (ACA) using extracranial donor sites requires long interposition grafts. The superficial temporal artery (STA) is frequently used for extracranial-intracranial ACA revascularization. However, the length of either STA branch is not sufficient to reach the ACA with a proper caliber match, so an interposition graft is required.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: As part of the laterotrigeminal venous system (LTVS), the emissary vein of the foramen ovale (EVFO) is an underrecognized venous structure communicating between the cavernous sinus and pterygoid plexus. The sphenobasal sinus is an anatomical variation of the sphenoparietal sinus that drains directly into the EVFO. The authors present the case of a ruptured arteriovenous malformation (AVM) with a unique drainage pattern through the sphenobasal sinus and EVFO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1928, neuroscientist Yushi Uchimura (1897-1980) published a landmark study detailing the hippocampal vasculature. Working in Walther Spielmeyer's Munich laboratory (1925-1927), Uchimura sought evidence for a vascular theory of Ammon's horn sclerosis (AHS). He described an artery supplying the vulnerable sector of the hippocampus, where pathognomonic changes of AHS were noted, and characterized the artery as particularly susceptible to circulatory disturbances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOverlapping surgery (OS) is a common practice in neurosurgery that has recently come under scrutiny. This study includes a systematic review and meta-analysis on articles evaluating the effects of OS on patient outcomes. PubMed and Scopus were searched for studies that analyzed outcome differences between overlapping and non-overlapping neurosurgical procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to master the surgical approaches to the middle cranial fossa, the surgeon needs to understand the relevant bony anatomy. However, she/he also needs to have a clear and sound understanding of the neural and vascular anatomy because, oftentimes, the osseous anatomy (except for the optic apparatus) should be removed to expose and protect the neurovascular anatomy. This is the second of a two-part article discussing the neurovascular anatomy of the middle cranial fossa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe middle cranial fossa is one of the most complex regions in neurosurgery and otolaryngology-in fact, the practice of skull base surgery originated from the need to treat pathologies in this region. Additionally, great neurosurgeons of our present and past are remembered for their unique methods of treating diseases in the middle fossa. The following article reviews the surgical anatomy of the middle fossa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) located in eloquent brain regions are historically associated with a poor prognosis. Awake craniotomy (AC) with the adjunct of brain mapping has the potential of identifying non-eloquent gyri to maximize resection, thereby theoretically decreasing the risk of neurologic deficits. With limited evidence regarding the efficacy of AC in treatment of eloquent AVMs, this review aims to investigate its surgical outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The nervus intermedius (NI) comprises fibers originating from the trigeminal, superior salivary, and solitary tract nuclei, which join the facial nerve (cranial nerve [CN] VII). Neighboring structures include the vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII), the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA), and its branches. Microsurgical procedures at the cerebellopontine angle (CPA) benefit from understanding NI anatomy and relationships, especially for the microsurgical treatment of geniculate neuralgia, where the NI is transected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this illustrative video, the authors demonstrate an endoscopic-assisted combined transcrusal anterior petrosal approach for resection of a large petroclival meningioma with significant brainstem compression involving Meckel's cave. This unique petrosal variant provides increased petroclival exposure that can potentially preserve hearing by combining a transcrusal labyrinthectomy with anterior petrosectomy (Kawase's approach). The advantages include multidirectional angles of attack to the brainstem and petroclival region without cerebellar retraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosurg Clin N Am
October 2022
Over the past century, major advances in the field of cerebrovascular anatomic research have transformed the craft of cerebrovascular surgery into a modern art. A thorough anatomic understanding of the complex cerebrovascular anatomy is crucial to a successful surgical procedure. Despite clear descriptions of the anatomic "norms" and "variations" in the existing literature, research on this topic is far from diminishing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOper Neurosurg (Hagerstown)
December 2022
Performing a successful microsurgical vascular anastomosis (MVA) is challenging and requires lots of practice. However, the most efficient practice protocol is yet to be found. We aimed to compare and analyze two major practice patterns for fine motor tasks as applied to learning MVA: distributed and mass practice protocols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Posterior fossa surgery is particularly prone to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage. Several methods have been introduced to address and/or prevent this complication. However, to the best of our knowledge, the use of a vascularized fascial flap based on the occipital artery for the purpose of reconstruction has not been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Bypass surgery has evolved into a complex surgical art with a variety of donor arteries, recipient arteries, interpositional grafts, anastomoses, and suturing techniques. Although innovation in contemporary bypasses has increased, the literal descriptions of these new bypasses have not kept pace. The existing nomenclature that joins donor and recipient arteries with a hyphen is simplistic, underinformative, and in need of improvement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe incorporation of perspective into art and science revolutionized the study of the brain. Beginning in about 1504, Leonardo da Vinci began to model the ventricles of the brain in three dimensions. A few years later, Andreus Vesalius illustrated radically novel brain dissections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: An extended retrosigmoid approach can offer sufficient space for clip reconstruction of some high-riding posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) aneurysms.
Objective: To quantitatively investigate the glossopharyngo-cochlear triangle (GCT) and anatomic structures within it.
Methods: Extended retrosigmoid craniotomies were performed on 10 sides of cadaveric heads, and the GCT was identified in each specimen.
Oper Neurosurg (Hagerstown)
February 2021
Background: Use of the far lateral transcondylar (FL) approach and vagoaccessory triangle is the standard exposure for clipping most posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) aneurysms. However, a distal PICA origin or high-lying vertebrobasilar junction can position the aneurysm beyond the vagoaccessory triangle, making the conventional FL approach inappropriate.
Objective: To demonstrate the utility of the extended retrosigmoid (eRS) approach and a lateral trajectory through the glossopharyngo-cochlear triangle as the surgical corridor for these cases.