A Retrospective Analysis of Temporal Lobe Gliosis after Middle Fossa Resection of Small Vestibular Schwannomas
Matthias Scheich, Miriam Bürklein, Manuel Stöth, Brigitte Bison, Rudolf Hagen, Stephan Hackenberg, Marius L. Vogt

TL;DR
This study examines whether surgery for small vestibular schwannomas causes brain damage in the temporal lobe, finding minimal evidence of such damage.
Contribution
The study provides new clinical evidence that the middle fossa surgical approach does not cause significant temporal lobe gliosis in most patients.
Findings
Only 5% of patients showed slight temporal lobe gliosis post-surgery.
No severe or moderate gliosis was observed in the patient group.
Clinical predictors had no significant relation to gliosis occurrence.
Abstract
Introduction: The middle cranial fossa (MCF) approach is a well-established procedure in surgery of the internal auditory canal, as well as with the retrosigmoid and translabyrinthine approaches. It is commonly used in the hearing-preserving microsurgery of small vestibular schwannomas (VS). The debate about the “best” approach for the microsurgery of small VS without contact to the brainstem is controversial. It has been stated that the MCF approach leads to irreversible damage to the temporal lobe, which may be evident in follow-up magnet resonance imaging (MRI) as gliosis in up to 70% of patients. Materials and Methods: This study represents a retrospective chart analysis conducted at a tertiary university hospital. Here, 76 postoperative MRIs were re-evaluated by an experienced neuroradiologist and compared with the preoperative images. Temporal lobe gliosis was classified on an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMeningioma and schwannoma management · Neurofibromatosis and Schwannoma Cases · Ear and Head Tumors
