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Schwannoma surgery

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Maneesha Nandimandalam, M.B.B.S.[2]

Overview

Overview

The feasibility of surgery depends on the stage of schwannoma at diagnosis. Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for schwannoma. There are three main approaches like translybyrinthine, retrosigmoid, middle fossa. The common complications of surgery include vertigo, hearing loss is another important complication associated with the operation, post-operative headache, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage, facial paralysis

Indications

Indications

  • Surgical intervention is recommended the management of schwannoma.
Surgery

Surgery

  • The feasibility of surgery depends on the stage of schwannoma at diagnosis.
  • Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for schwannoma.
  • The following table compares the different type of surgical approaches for vestibular schwannoma management.
Indications, benefits and disadvantages of lateral skull base approaches for VS resection.
Translybyrinthine Retrosigmoid Middle fossa
Indications Non-serviceable hearing; any IAC or CPA VS VS with large CPA component; medial IAC VS Small lateral IAC VS (<0.5 cm); small medial IAC VS with < 1 cm CPA component
Advantages Minimal brain retraction Panoramic CPA exposure; better facial nerve and hearing preservation for medial VS Better exposure lateral IAC
Disadvantages Complete hearing loss; difficult approach for CPA VS ventral to porus acusticus; risk for facial nerve injury Limited access to lateral IAC; potential for cerebellar and brainstem injury Limited PF access; temporal lobe retraction; risk for facial nerve injury
  • The common complications of surgery include the following:
    • Vertigo
    • Hearing loss
    • Post-operative headache
    • Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage
    • Facial paralysis
Contraindications

Contraindications

References

References


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