Background: The jugular tubercle is a rounded bony prominence that arises from the inferolateral margin of the clivus. In a previous publication, we described the surgical anatomy of the expanded endonasal approach to the jugular tubercle.
Objective: To illustrate the translation of laboratory work to the operating room describing the anatomic and technical nuances of the endonasal approach to the jugular tubercle.
Methods: We review the relevant surgical anatomy needed to perform an endonasal approach to the jugular tubercle, and we select 4 different lesions to illustrate the application of our laboratory findings.
Results: In the first case, exposure and partial drilling of the jugular tubercle was critical to gain an adequate corridor to the meningioma, particularly to its inferolateral margin. This allowed for early devascularization, safe extracapsular dissection, and preservation of surrounding neurovascular structures. In addition, the jugular tubercle was hyperostotic and its resection, along with generous dural removal, provided a grade I Simpson tumor resection. In the second (chondrosarcoma) and third (chordoma) cases, the jugular tubercle was infiltrated by tumor, and consequently its complete resection was essential to achieve total tumor removal. In the last case, an unusual adrenocorticotropic hormone-secreting adenoma recurrence at the jugular tubercle region, the technical modification of the transclival approach presented here was successfully applied to achieve complete resection and Cushing disease remission.
Conclusion: The transjugular tubercle variant of the expanded endonasal transclival approach allows for direct access to ventrolateral lesions in the inferior clival/petroclival region with no cerebral or cerebellar retraction, or cranial nerve manipulation during the approach.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/NEU.0b013e3182438915 | DOI Listing |
No Shinkei Geka
September 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine.
Neurosurgery
August 2024
Division of Neurointerventional Surgery, Neuroscience Institute, Queen's Medical Center, Honolulu , Hawaii , USA.
Background And Objectives: Cerebral venous outflow disorders (CVDs) secondary to internal jugular vein (IJV) stenosis are becoming an increasingly recognized cause of significant cognitive and functional impairment in patients. There are little published data on IJV stenting for this condition. This study aims to report on procedural success.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOper Neurosurg (Hagerstown)
December 2023
Department of neurosurgery, International Neuroscience Institute, Hannover, Germany.
Indications Corridor And Limits Of Exposure: The retrosigmoid intradural suprameatal approach is mostly indicated for tumors in the cerebellopontine angle extending toward the Meckel cave and supratentorial regions, most frequently meningiomas and schwannomas. This approach was first established by the senior author in 1982.
Anatomic Essentials Need For Preoperative Planning And Assessment: Nervous structures: cranial nerves III to XII, cerebellum, and brainstem.
Oper Neurosurg (Hagerstown)
March 2024
Department of Neurological Surgery and Skull Base Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania , USA.
Indications Corridor And Limits Of Exposure: Endoscopic endonasal far-medial approach provides an effective and safe corridor to access the parasagittal structures of the lower clivus such as the medial jugular tubercle (JT) and occipital condyle (OC) for lesions that displace neurovascular structures laterally.
Anatomic Essentials Need For Preoperative Planning And Assessment: Parapharyngeal internal carotid arteries (ICAs) run posterolateral to the eustachian tubes and lateral to the OC. The supracondylar groove is a superficial landmark for the hypoglossal canal, which divides the lateral extension of clivus into the JT and OC.
J Neurosurg Case Lessons
October 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, Kurashiki Central Hospital, Kurashiki, Japan
Background: The main feeding artery of an anterior condylar arteriovenous fistula (AC-AVF) is the ascending pharyngeal artery and rarely the internal maxillary artery.
Observations: A 58-year-old male with a history of sinusitis since adolescence presented with a 5-year history of bilateral pulsatile tinnitus and a 2-month history of right ocular symptoms. Angiography showed that the peripheral branches of the bilateral internal maxillary arteries were the main feeding arteries of the AC-AVF and that they gathered in the clivus with a relatively large shunted pouch in the left jugular tubercle.
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