Abstract
A.M. Kassam; A.J. Thomas; L.A.
Zimmer; C.H. Snyderman; R.L. Carrau; A. Mintz; M. Horowitz
Objective and Importance
Vascular lesions with
an intraosseus nidus involving the skull base are uncommon and challenging
[Gianoli GJ, Amedee RG Vascular malformation of the sphenoid sinus. Ear Nose
Throat J. 70:373-375;(1991), Malik GM, Mahmood A, Mehta BA Dural arteriovenous
malformation of the skull base with intraosseous vascular nidus. Report of two
cases. J. Neurosurg 81:620-623;(1994)]. We present a pediatric patient, with a
life-threatening arteriovenous malformation (AVM) of the sphenoid sinus,
clivus, and ventral skull base, who failed routine multimodality management of
AVMs. An entirely transsphenoidal fully endoscopic resection was used to resect
this ventral cranial base AVM with an intraosseus nidus located in the clivus.
Clinical Presentation
A 4-year-old female
presented with recurrent, life-threatening hemorrhages from a clival and
ventral skull base AVM of the entire clivus and ventral skull base. The patient
had been temporized from the age of 2-4 years with multiple internal and
external carotid arterial particulate and alcohol embolizations, including both
external and internal carotid artery embolizations, intracranial ligation of
the right internal carotid artery, and gamma knife irradiation. Despite these multiple
interventions, the patient had persistent, life-threatening hemorrhages from
arterial recanalization and recruitment requiring intubation, tracheostomy, and
nasopharyngeal packing.
Intervention
The patient underwent
a three-stage surgical intervention to resect the AVM. An open subfrontal
approach, as the first procedure, provided minimal access to the feeding
vessels and was therefore aborted. A two-stage image-guided fully endoscopic
approach via a sublabial midface approach without external incisions was
performed. Postoperative angiography revealed minimal residual shunting in the
pharynx and cavernous sinus. The patient has been free of significant
hemorrhages over the past three years.
Conclusion
Technological
advances in endoscopic surgery and image guidance are now allowing for purely
endoscopic surgical treatment of previously unresectable lesions with
acceptable morbidity. We report the successful and safe resection of a ventral
cranial base AVM via a fully endoscopic approach. This paper reports the first
AVM with a purely intraosseus nidus of the ventral skull base and demonstrates
the ability to deal with complex ventral skull base lesions using a fully
endoscopic transsphenoidal technique.