Surgical management of an abscess of the insula

Author:

Leavitt Lydia1,Baohan Amy2,Heller Howard3,Kozanno Liana4,Frosch Matthew P.4,Dunn Gavin2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Rockford, Illinois,

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

3. Infectious Diseases Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

4. Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

Abstract

Background: Mass lesions within the insular are diagnostically and surgically challenging due to the numerous critical cortical, subcortical, and vascular structures surrounding the region. Two main surgical techniques – the transsylvian approach and the transcortical approach – provide access to the insular cortex. Of the range of pathologies encountered, abscesses in the insula are surprisingly rare. Case Description: A 34-year-old patient was admitted for surgical resection of a suspected high-grade glioma in the insula of the dominant hemisphere. A rapid clinical decline prompted emergent neurosurgical intervention using a transsylvian approach. Surprisingly, abundant purulent material was encountered on entering the insular fossa. Pathological analysis confirmed an insular abscess, although a source of infection could not be identified. The patient required a second evacuation for reaccumulation of the abscess and adjuvant corticosteroids for extensive cerebral edema. Conclusion: An abscess located in the insular cortex is an incredibly rare occurrence. Surgical management using the transsylvian approach is one option to approach this region. Familiarity with this approach is thus extremely beneficial in situations requiring emergent access to the dominant insula when awake mapping is not feasible. In addition, treatment of abscesses with adjuvant corticosteroids is indicated when extensive, life-threatening cerebral edema is present.

Publisher

Scientific Scholar

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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