Affiliation:
1. Department of Pediatric Neurosurgery, “Anna Meyer” Children Hospital, Florence, Italy
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Endoscopic mini-invasive treatment for sporadic trigonocephaly is becoming a widely accepted surgical treatment. In most centers this treatment is performed in association with postoperative helmeting. The aim of the present study was to review and report the authors’ 11-year experience of endoscope-assisted metopic suturectomy for treatment of 62 trigonocephaly patients without helmet use.
METHODS
For this retrospective study, clinical data of 62 consecutive pediatric patients (age 3–8 months) were obtained from the data bank of the “Anna Meyer” Children Hospital. These patients had been diagnosed with trigonocephaly (type II and III) and undergone surgery performed with a mini-invasive endoscopic technique during the period from January 2011 to January 2022. No helmet was used postoperatively in these patients, and they were evaluated through craniometric measurements, pre-/postoperative photographs, and parents’ impressions, as well as thorough clinical examinations during follow-up appointments.
RESULTS
The mean patient follow-up period was 6 ± 1.3 years. The female/male ratio was 1:2; 52% of the patients presented with type II trigonocephaly and the remaining patients with type III. The mean age at surgery was 153 ± 44 days (5 ± 1.5 months, range 3–8 months). In 92% of the patients the surgical outcome was defined as good to excellent. However, 4 patients presented with an unsatisfactory outcome, including 1 patient with a CSF collection requiring surgical repair 2 months after the first surgery and 1 patient who developed infection of the surgical wound and needed a second surgery. In the latter patient the outcome was evaluated as satisfactory, and no sequelae regarding the infection were encountered during follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS
According to the authors’ experience, endoscopic metopic suturectomy alone, without the use of a helmet, is a valid surgical option for trigonocephaly treatment, and its application can be considered in patients of older age groups (up to 8 months). Thus, in the right patient selection context, this technique represents the treatment of choice.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
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