Background: We sought to report the successful surgical management of a case of ecchordosis physaliphora (EP) using a neuro-endoscopic trans-third ventricular approach (ETTVA) and to provide a current review of literature on EP.
Case Description: A 57-year-old man presenting with a 2-year history of diplopia due to right abducens nerve palsy and paresthesia of the left body underwent magnetic resonance imaging, which revealed a retroclival intracisternal lesion. The cystic lesion was considered to be most likely EP according to neuroradiologic features. The patient underwent an endoscopic trans-third ventricular resection. A pediatric endoscope was passed from a precoronal burr hole through the left lateral into the third ventricle. The floor of the third ventricle was opened by a 2-micron laser. This approach permitted us to expose the lesion in the retroclival cistern and follow up with a subtotal removal. Remnants of the capsule, which were firmly adherent to small pontine arteries and the left abducens nerve, were left. Histology confirmed EP. The patient recovered well from surgery, and symptoms regressed at clinical follow-up.
Conclusion: The endoscopic approach for third ventriculostomy can also be used for the surgical management of retroclival lesions. However, a small pediatric endoscope with an angled view, which can be passed through the floor of the third ventricle without causing harm, is mandatory to explore all important structures in the narrow surgical space. Limitations in this delicate environment are firm adhesions to vessels and nerves because only 1-instrument manipulation is possible and bleeding must be avoided.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2016.02.041 | DOI Listing |
J Neurosurg
December 2024
3Department of Neurosurgery, Niigata Seiro Hospital, Seiro, Niigata, Japan.
Objective: Since the recent development of stereotactic ablation surgery, which can provide good seizure outcomes without limitations in size or location, conventional classification systems have become unsuitable for surgical guidance. The present study aimed to evaluate the validity of a newly proposed classification system focusing on the attachment pattern.
Methods: This retrospective study investigated 218 patients with hypothalamic hamartomas who underwent MRI-guided stereotactic radiofrequency thermocoagulation and were followed for at least 1 year after their last surgery.
Neurol India
September 2019
Department of Neurosurgery, Kawasaki Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan.
World Neurosurg
June 2016
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany.
Background: We sought to report the successful surgical management of a case of ecchordosis physaliphora (EP) using a neuro-endoscopic trans-third ventricular approach (ETTVA) and to provide a current review of literature on EP.
Case Description: A 57-year-old man presenting with a 2-year history of diplopia due to right abducens nerve palsy and paresthesia of the left body underwent magnetic resonance imaging, which revealed a retroclival intracisternal lesion. The cystic lesion was considered to be most likely EP according to neuroradiologic features.
SAGE Open Med Case Rep
August 2016
Department of Neurosurgery, Graduate School of Biomedical & Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan.
Minim Invasive Neurosurg
December 2008
Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Medical University, Tokyo, Japan.
Due to the establishment in recent years of neuroendoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV), it has become possible during ETV to observe the ventral brainstem surface--particularly the prepontine cistern--in a minimally invasive manner via the third ventricular base with a neuroendoscope. As an adaptation of that technique in this study, we investigated a neuroendoscopic trans-third ventricle approach (ETTVA), which accesses lesions of the ventral brainstem surface with a neuroendoscope inserted via the stoma of the third ventricular floor. Our study included 6 cases, including one case each of neurenteric cyst, chordoma, pontine glioma (astrocytoma), ecchordosis physaliphora, endodermal cyst, and cystic schwannoma.
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