Delayed Occipitocervical Instability With Cranial Settling After Far-Lateral Transcondylar Surgery for Invasive Skull Base Tumor

Author:

Mazur Marcus D1,Dailey Andrew T1,Shah Lubdha2,Scoville Jonathan P1,Couldwell William T1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Clinical Neurosciences Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

2. Department of Radiology, Clinical Neurosciences Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Occipitocervical instability is a rare but potentially severe complication of a far-lateral transcondylar surgical approach to the skull base. OBJECTIVE To investigate the incidence of clinically significant occipitocervical instability after transcondylar surgery via a far-lateral approach and to determine whether the extent of occipital condyle resection relative to the hypoglossal canal was associated with the development of occipitocervical instability. METHODS A retrospective review of patients undergoing far-lateral transcondylar surgery was performed at our institution to identify patients who developed postoperative occipitocervical instability. RESULTS Of the 61 far-lateral transcondylar operations performed, the authors identified 2 cases of delayed occipitocervical instability after surgery. In each case, the patient had tumor invading into the occipital condyle and supracondylar region and a resection extending anterior to the hypoglossal canal was performed. Both patients presented with pathological fractures and a severe occipitocervical deformity. CONCLUSION Patients who have tumor involvement of the occipital condyle and supracondylar region and undergo partial unilateral condylar resection are at risk for occipitocervical instability and should be considered for occipitocervical fusion.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

Reference11 articles.

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2. Quantitative analysis of the transcondylar approach to the foramen magnum;Wanebo;Neurosurgery,2001

3. Quantitative description of the far-lateral transcondylar transtubercular approach to the foramen magnum and clivus;Spektor;J Neurosurg,2000

4. The effect of condylectomy on extreme lateral transcondylar approach to the anterior foramen magnum;Acikbas;Acta Neurochir,1997

5. Stability of the craniovertebral junction after unilateral occipital condyle resection: a biomechanical study;Vishteh;J Neurosurg,1999

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