• Contact us
  • E-Submission
ABOUT
BROWSE ARTICLES
JOURNAL POLICIES
FOR CONTRIBUTORS

Articles

Page Path

Original Article

Surgical Approaches to Cavernous Sinus

The Ewha Medical Journal 2006;29(2):107-116. Published online: September 30, 2006

Department of Neurosurgery, Ewha Womans University College of Medicine, Korea.

Copyright © 2006. Ewha Womans University School of Medicine

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

  • 46 Views
  • 0 Download
  • 1 Crossref
next
  • Cravernous sinus surgery has been performed increasingly in the last 2 decades because of advance in modern neuroimaging rechiques, nuw surgical anatomy knowledge and surgical technoligies. We reviewed the surgicla approaches to cavernous sinus and surgical anatomy. Extradural approach to cavernous sinus has represented a refinement of the orifinal work performed on this topic by Parkinson, Dolenc, Hakba, and other enthusiastic neurosurgeons. Surgical access to cavernous sinus has traditionally been accomplished through pterinal, subtemporal, orbitozygomatic intradural or extradural, or combined intra-extradural approach. Extradural approach includes craniotomy with or without resection of zygomatic archm exposure of superior orbital fissure and skull base foramina, anterior clinoidectomy, unroofing of opic canal, dissection of laternal wall and entire cavernous sinus. And intraduaral approach has more procedure of dural incision and exposure of cranial nerves, intermal carotid artery and its branches. The most important part of extradural procedure is th identify and dissect the cleavage plane between the temporal dura and the deep layer of lateral wall of cavernous sinus. The other significant aspects of dissection are anterior clinoidectomy and preper orientation while dissecting the dura matter of superior orbital fissure to avoid damage to nerve and vessl. The cranial nerves in lateral wall of cavernous sinus have neural sheath which are probably well protected from mechanical injury during surgery. It is also important to maintain vascular supply for cranial nerves to avoid injury during dissecrion. The advancing interventional techinque is competion with direct surgical management of vascular lesion of cavernous sinous. Also the same may be applied to neoplastic lesions involving cavernous sinous, as radiosurgety like gamma knife is competing with surgical treatment. However, with improved knowlidge and surgocal techiques, most of lesions in cavernous sinus can be removed without additional neurological deficits.

Figure & Data

References

    Citations

    Citations to this article as recorded by  
    • Clinical analysis of cavernous sinus anatomy, pathologies, diagnostics, surgical management and complications – Comprehensive review
      Adrian Balcerzak, R. Shane Tubbs, Nicol Zielinska, Łukasz Olewnik
      Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger.2023; 245: 152004.     CrossRef

    Download Citation

    Download a citation file in RIS format that can be imported by all major citation management software, including EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and Reference Manager.

    Format:

    Include:

    Surgical Approaches to Cavernous Sinus
    Ihwa Ŭidae chi. 2006;29(2):107-116.   Published online September 30, 2006
    Download Citation
    Download a citation file in RIS format that can be imported by all major citation management software, including EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and Reference Manager.

    Format:
    • RIS — For EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and most other reference management software
    • BibTeX — For JabRef, BibDesk, and other BibTeX-specific software
    Include:
    • Citation for the content below
    Surgical Approaches to Cavernous Sinus
    Ihwa Ŭidae chi. 2006;29(2):107-116.   Published online September 30, 2006
    Close
    Surgical Approaches to Cavernous Sinus
    Surgical Approaches to Cavernous Sinus
    TOP