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Classification and Management of Pontecerebellar-Petrosal Bridging Veins

Authors :
Juan F. Villalonga
Matías Baldoncini
José I. Pailler
Amparo Saenz
Alice Giotta Lucifero
Sabino Luzzi
Derek O. Pipolo
Alvaro Campero
Source :
World Neurosurgery. 160:e481-e486
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

The risks and benefits of coagulating intradural venous elements during a retrosigmoid approach for trigeminal neurovascular decompression has not been accurately established. The objectives of this study were to identify the veins that drain into the superior petrosal sinus, classify them in relation to the suprameatal tubercle, and determine the implication of their coagulation.A retrospective study of 3-dimensional surgical videos of retrosigmoid approaches for trigeminal neurovascular decompression from the Laboratory of Neurosurgical Innovations of Tucumán (LINT) digital archive was carried out. The veins encountered were classified into 3 groups: retromeatal, meatal and premeatal. The neurosurgical postoperative complication scale proposed by Landriel et al. was utilized to assess complications from venous coagulation. A grade 0 was added for patients without complications. The STATA 14 program was utilized for statistical analysis.The pontocerebellar-petrosal veins of 28 patients who underwent trigeminal decompressive surgery were analyzed. In 7 cases these were found in the retromeatal region; 100% were sacrificed. Eleven cases revealed veins within the meatal region; 90.91% were coagulated. Veins in the premeatal region were found in 14 cases; 57.14% were sacrificed. In the postoperative follow-up, 27 patients were grade 0 and 1 patient developed postoperative meningitis (grade Ib complication). No patient suffered vascular complications.The venous elements identified in trigeminal neurovascular decompressive surgery are variable. We propose classifying them into retromeatal, meatal, and premeatal groups. Retromeatal and meatal veins can be safely sacrificed for appropriate visualization of the neurovascular conflict. The premeatal venous elements should be coagulated only in justified cases.

Details

ISSN :
18788750
Volume :
160
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World Neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4afc292d8f05d37e4cd1626cde41449a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2022.01.054