Name:
10.3171/2025.10.FOCVID25187_vid
Description:
10.3171/2025.10.FOCVID25187_vid
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T00H10M04S
Embed URL:
https://thejns.org/video/
Content URL:
https://cadmoreoriginalmedia.blob.core.windows.net/76a82eb5-1bc4-412d-a8ca-678c4008d200/20. 25-187.mp4?sv=2019-02-02&sr=c&sig=Qne1OOusgZHh7edUjfvAYP%2BzYU%2BXFnc1lP6%2Bl1szUoI%3D&st=2026-04-05T07%3A11%3A36Z&se=2026-04-05T09%3A16%3A36Z&sp=r
Upload Date:
2025-11-18T00:00:00.0000000
Transcript:
Language: EN.
Segment:0 .
[MUSIC PLAYING]
SPEAKER: This is a case of a combined lateral and ventral approach for a circumferential decompression of an intraosseous suprasellar meningioma encasing the optic nerve. The case refers to a 50-year-old female who presented with gradual vision loss over the prior year. She did have a family history of Stargardt's disease as well as a personal history of atypical hyperplasia multiple years prior. On visual examination, she had hand motions only on the left side with an afferent pupillary defect but normal vision on the right.
SPEAKER: Here are her visual fields and her optical coherence tomography showing significant thinning of the ganglion cell layer on the left side. Her imaging showed an expansile mass centered on the planum and tuberculum filling the sphenoid sinus. This was mainly bony, but it had some soft components and was circumferentially encircling the optic nerve.
SPEAKER: You see that this was extending over the left anterior clinoid process and compressing the nerve both from medially and laterally. The lesion was significantly calcified, expansile to the native bone. She had normal pituitary panel and negative metastatic workup. We consider a lateral approach with anterior clinoidectomy, an endoscopic endonasal approach, transbasal approach with a pericranial flap, as well as combined approaches with endonasal and lateral, exchanging which is done first.
SPEAKER: An endoscopic approach here would provide direct visualization of the inferior medial optic canal, allowing for less nerve manipulation and also preservation of the correct arachnoidal planes as it would be approaching the tumor from its origin. It also provides an excellent reconstruction option with nasoseptal flap for the large bony defect that would be resulting after resection of this tumor. However, optic nerve decompression would happen later in the case, potentially after blood loss, which would compromise the perfusion of the optic nerve, which is compressed and also without any significant landmarks, as most of the tumor is filling the sphenoid. It would also provide poor access to the anterior clinoid, which provided lateral compression in this case. On the flip side, a pterional craniotomy with anterior clinoidectomy would provide early bony decompression of the optic nerve with well preserved landmarks and before any significant blood loss has occurred, which would compromise the perfusion of the optic nerve.
SPEAKER: It would also help us remove the lateral compression, but provides poor and blind access to the inferomedial optic canal, as well as attacks the tumor from the wrong arachnoidal planes potentially placing the perforators to the optic nerve at risk from the superior hypophyseal arteries.
SPEAKER: We chose to perform a combined approach starting with the lateral first, as this would provide early decompression of the optic nerve with preservation of landmarks and before any significant blood loss, and perform secondly an endonasal approach, which would allow us to approach the inferomedial optic canal, which is commonly affected in these cases, without significant manipulation of the optic nerve. It would allow us to preserve the correct arachnoidal planes and also would give us a very good reconstructive option. We chose to perform this procedure in a sequential, as opposed to a staged or simultaneous, fashion as a compromise between being expeditious and avoiding two trips to the OR, but also having control of blood loss and having our full attention at each task at hand.
SPEAKER: Good neuroanesthesia considerations for cases like this are a preinduction A-line with maintenance of mean arterial pressures above 80; maintenance of euvolemia and avoiding hypovolemia; placing a lumbar drain up front allows brain relaxation for the extradural anterior clinoidectomy without requiring high doses of mannitol, which may cause hypovolemia and compromise the profusion of the optic nerve; steroids for optic nerve protection, as well as being very mindful of the hematocrit and the blood loss during the case.
SPEAKER: The positioning was one that would accommodate both a lateral as well as an endonasal approach done in sequence. Again, the tumor here was circumferentially compressing the optic nerve with extension in the left anterior clinoid process. We were starting with a lateral approach first with a relatively limited frontolateral approach for an anterior clinoidectomy. Placement of a lumbar drain preoperatively with drainage approximately 80 cc of cerebrospinal fluid.
SPEAKER: Here is the approach of drilling the anterior clinoid and skeletonizing the optic nerve. I'm drilling a trough medial to the optic nerve, which would serve as a landmark when we come laterally. Here we see the periorbita, the optic nerve, the supraorbital fissure, optic strut, and carotid-oculomotor membrane that were exposed. Again, drilling a trough medially to the optic nerve would provide a good landmark so that we don't land on the optic nerve when we're coming ventrally without good landmarks.
SPEAKER: Coming endonasally, a nasoseptal flap was elevated. There are soft components to it but also a significant amount of hyperostotic bone. We're finding here the medial landmark, the medial trough that is a landmark in exposing the sella; it's our goal to find and extrapolate anatomy. Eggshelling the bone and removing it slowly. Here we're drilling the lamina papyracea that was significantly hyperostosed and extending back to the lateral opticocarotid recess with the extension of the optic strut from the other side, from the endonasal side.
SPEAKER: Here I'm removing it completely, essentially achieving a 360 bony decompression of the optic canal, extending the bony decompression on the right side as well, and finally opening the dura. Our goal here is to again maintain the microvasculature of the optic nerve. Here's the invasion of the inferomedial optic canal, and direct visualization of that interface between the optic and the tumor is crucial for maintaining those small perforators to the optic that can be quite detrimental if hurt. Extending the exposure to the distal dural ring and trying to trim the dura of the distal dural ring back to the ophthalmic artery.
SPEAKER: Here we're removing some of the tumor that's invading the superior intracavernous sinus and cutting further down to remove the diaphragma sellae that was involved with soft tumor. Taking back the diaphragmatic cut to the stalk and further trimming, again of the distal dural ring.
SPEAKER: Here we're opening into the cavernous sinus after Dopplering the carotid artery to facilitate further resection of the diaphragma and some of the tumor that was extending into the cavernous sinus. Finally, trimming some of the tumor extending to the prechiasmatic recess and planum and coagulation of the dural attachment. Here's the final result of a good resection of the tumor, circumferential decompression of the optic nerve with maintenance of the microvasculature of the optic nerve.
SPEAKER: For reconstruction, we perform a multilayered reconstruction with an inlaid dural substitute, a fascial allograft, and a vascularized nasoseptal flap, which as you see here has good perfusion on indocyanine green angiography, absorbable and nonabsorbable packing. Here's the postoperative imaging showing bony 360 decompression of the optic nerve. The patient had an uneventful course, had a lumbar drain for 72 hours, and was discharged on postoperative day 3 without any complications and with immediate subjective improvement in vision.
SPEAKER: At 2 months postoperatively, she had improved to 20/30 and was able to read from hand motions, that was her preoperative exam. Here are her visual fields postoperatively and at 2 years post-op, there was no evidence of recurrence of the tumor. In conclusion, optic nerve compression should be approached with caution before, during, and after surgery, avoiding excessive manipulation and decreased perfusion of the nerve and taking every precaution to avoid injury to the microvasculature.
SPEAKER: Combined approaches can sometimes provide optimal decompression when the nerve is compressed circumferentially, but appropriate case selection and attention to detail remains crucial. Thank you.