The extended transbasal approach combines a bifrontal craniotomy with an orbital nasal and potentially a sphenoethmoidal osteotomy to provide excellent access to malignancies of the anterior, middle and posterior skull base. The approach enables the en bloc resection of tumors within the frontal lobes, orbits, paranasal sinuses and sphenoclival corridors without brain retraction and may obviate the need for transfacial access. We present our 7-year experience during which 29 patients underwent surgery with the extended transbasal exposure. In 25 patients the extended transbasal approach was used alone; in the remaining four it was combined with additional approaches. With exception of two patients, all lesions were removed en bloc. Reconstruction was accomplished with the use of pericranium and in some instances a temporalis muscle pedicle or a gracilis microvascular free flap. There were no mortalities associated with this approach. Seven patients experienced infections, four patients experienced cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) leakage, two patients who had received adjuvant radiation experienced scalp necrosis, three patients experienced pneumocephalus, and 29 patients experienced cranial neuropathies, the majority of which were loss of olfaction. The average follow-up for our patients was 34 months with a range of 2--62 months.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11060-004-5173-6DOI Listing

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  • * The approach to surgical removal of these tumors has shifted from traditional transcranial methods to a transnasal endoscopic approach, which offers benefits like minimizing damage to critical structures while excising both intranasal and intracranial components.
  • * A case study of a 50-year-old woman with visual impairment due to a transbasal meningioma illustrates successful surgical removal via an endoscopic technique, resulting in immediate improvement of her symptoms and confirmation of
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