Endoscopically Assisted Drilling, Exposure of the Fundus through a Presigmoid Retrolabyrinthine Approach: A Cadaveric Feasibility Study

Thomas Muelleman, Matthew Shew, Sameer Alvi, Kushal Shah, Hinrich Staecker, Roukouz Chamoun, James Lin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

The presigmoid retrolabyrinthine approach to the cerebellopontine angle is traditionally described to not provide access to the internal auditory canal (IAC). We aimed to evaluate the extent of the IAC that could be exposed with endoscopically assisted drilling and to measure the percentage of the IAC that could be visualized with the microscope and various endoscopes after drilling had been completed. Presigmoid retrolabyrinthine approaches were performed bilaterally on 4 fresh cadaveric heads. We performed endoscopically assisted drilling to expose the fundus of the IAC, which resulted in exposure of the entire IAC in 8 of 8 temporal bone specimens. The microscope afforded a mean view of 83% (n = 8) of the IAC. The 0°, 30°, 45°, and 70° endoscope each afforded a view of 100% of the IAC in 8 of 8 temporal bone specimens. In conclusion, endoscopic drilling of the IAC of can provide an extradural means of exposing the entire length of the IAC while preserving the labyrinth.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)155-157
Number of pages3
JournalOtolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery (United States)
Volume158
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2018

Keywords

  • endoscope
  • endoscopic drilling
  • internal auditory canal
  • labyrinth preservation
  • presigmoid retrolabyrinthine
  • retrolabyrinthine
  • skull base

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