Pediatric Congenital Anterior Skull Base Encephaloceles and Surgical Management: A Comparative Review of 22 Patients Treated Transnasally, Transcranially, or Combined Approach With a Review of the Literature.
Michelle M Kameda-Smith, Youngkyung Jung, Felice D'Arco, Richard Hewitt, Kristian Aquilina, Noor Ul Owase Jeelani
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and objectives: Anterior basal encephaloceles are considered a rare entity and are often associated with midline cerebral abnormalities. Those with a large skull base defect and herniation of brain parenchyma in the neonate or young infant present unique challenges for surgical management.
Methods: We analyzed the neurosurgical administrative and operative databases between 1986 and 2022 to determine clinical presentation, operative approach, and outcome of basal encephaloceles.
Results: Over the 36-year period, 27 pediatric anterior basal encephaloceles were managed, of which 22 had full documentation and images allowing comprehensive review. Mean age at presentation was 5 years (SD 4.94). The majority were transethmoidal encephaloceles (59%), followed by the transsphenoidal-sphenoethmoidal type (32%). Overall, 91% were managed surgically by a transcranial, endoscopic, or combined approach. Four children required subsequent procedures, predominantly for persistent cerebrospinal fluid leak. No significant differences in proportion of patients requiring interval/revision surgery after initial conservative, endoscopic endonasal, or transcranial surgery was identified. Neither age at surgery nor size of the defect on computed tomography scan was associated with the need for revision surgery. Size of cranial defect was significantly smaller in the endoscopic group ( P = .01). There was a historic tendency for younger children with larger defects to have a transcranial approach. With the addition of endoscopic skull base expertise, smaller defects in older children were more recently treated endoscopically.
Conclusion: Basal encephaloceles are rare and complex lesions and are optimally managed within a skull base multidisciplinary team able to provide multiple approaches. Large skull base defects with brain parenchymal involvement often require a transcranial or combined transcranial-endoscopic approach.
期刊介绍:
Neurosurgery, the official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, publishes research on clinical and experimental neurosurgery covering the very latest developments in science, technology, and medicine. For professionals aware of the rapid pace of developments in the field, this journal is nothing short of indispensable as the most complete window on the contemporary field of neurosurgery.
Neurosurgery is the fastest-growing journal in the field, with a worldwide reputation for reliable coverage delivered with a fresh and dynamic outlook.