Microsurgical Resection of a Petroclival Epidermoid Cyst Using an Anterior Petrosectomy Approach: 2-Dimensional Operative Video

Author:

Vakharia Kunal V1,Naylor Ryan M1,Nassiri Ashley M2,Driscoll Colin L W2,Link Michael J12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA

2. Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA

Abstract

Abstract Epidermoid cysts are rare, benign lesions that result from inclusion of ectodermal elements during neural tube closure.1 Cysts are composed of desquamated epithelial cells and restrict diffusion on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).2,3 Symptoms are attributable to anatomic location.4,5 In this video, we illustrate the surgical treatment of an epidermoid cyst located in the right cerebellopontine angle, petrous apex, and Meckel's cave. The patient, a 33-yr-old female with right-sided V1 trigeminal hypoesthesia, underwent surveillance imaging for 2 yr. However, she developed progressive V1 and V2 trigeminal hypoesthesia and imaging revealed enlargement of the lesion. Therefore, surgical resection was pursued. The patient consented to the procedure. The patient underwent a right middle fossa craniotomy and anterior petrosectomy. After identifying the greater superficial petrosal nerve and cutting the middle meningeal artery as it exited foramen spinosum, Kawase's triangle was drilled, and the dura over Meckel's cave and the subtemporal dura were opened. The lesion was resected, taking care to preserve the trigeminal nerve and the basilar artery. A retrosigmoid craniotomy was then fashioned. The cyst and its capsule were dissected off the brainstem and cranial nerves utilizing natural corridors between the trigeminal and vestibulocochlear nerves as well as between the facial and lower cranial nerves. Gross total resection was confirmed on postoperative MRI, and she was discharged home on postoperative day 5. Three months after surgery, she underwent formal pinprick testing, which revealed 95% loss of sensation in V1, 20% loss in V2, and normal sensation in V3. Three-month postoperative MRI showed no residual tumor.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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