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The "yo-yo" technique to prevent cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea after anterior clinoidectomy for proximal internal carotid artery aneurysms
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The "yo-yo" technique to prevent cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea after anterior clinoidectomy for proximal internal carotid artery aneurysms

John H Chi, Michael Sughrue, Sandeep Kunwar and Michael T Lawton
Neurosurgery, Vol.59(1 Suppl 1), pp.ONS101-ONS-107
07/2006
PMID: 16888539

Abstract

Carotid Artery, Internal - physiopathology Carotid Artery, Internal - surgery Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea - etiology Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea - physiopathology Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea - prevention & control Cranial Fossa, Middle - anatomy & histology Cranial Fossa, Middle - pathology Cranial Fossa, Middle - surgery Craniotomy - methods Dura Mater - anatomy & histology Dura Mater - surgery Female Humans Intracranial Aneurysm - physiopathology Intracranial Aneurysm - surgery Middle Aged Postoperative Complications - etiology Postoperative Complications - physiopathology Postoperative Complications - prevention & control Sella Turcica - anatomy & histology Sella Turcica - surgery Sphenoid Bone - anatomy & histology Sphenoid Bone - surgery Sphenoid Sinus - anatomy & histology Sphenoid Sinus - injuries Sphenoid Sinus - surgery Temporal Muscle - transplantation Tissue Transplantation - methods
Resection of the anterior clinoid process is important for the exposure of aneurysms on clinoidal and supraclinoidal segments of the internal carotid artery. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) rhinorrhea can complicate anterior clinoidectomy when the optic strut is pneumatized and its removal communicates the subarachnoid space with the sphenoid sinus. We present a technique for repairing this defect and preventing CSF rhinorrhea. A suture is secured around a strip of temporalis muscle, which is then pushed through the opening in the optic strut completely into the sphenoid sinus. The ends of suture that trail the muscle are used to retract the muscle from the sphenoid sinus back into the optic strut. The suture is trimmed and the repair is covered with sealant or fibrin glue. During an 8-year period in which 127 patients with proximal internal carotid artery aneurysms that required anterior clinoidectomy were treated, pneumatized optic struts were encountered in 14 patients (11%). Four patients were treated with the "yo-yo" technique, none of whom experienced CSF rhinorrhea. Before using this technique, 10 patients were managed with standard packing techniques (wax, muscle, and gel foam) and four of these patients subsequently experienced CSF rhinorrhea (40%). In these four patients, all required reoperation with either craniotomy and packing with pericranium (one patient), Couldwell-Luc procedure (one patient), or endoscopic transnasal obliteration of the sphenoid sinus with fat (two patients). The "yo-yo" technique of tightly wedging a muscle plug into the optic strut proved to be simple, fast, and effective, preventing CSF rhinorrhea in all patients in whom it was applied. Although experience with this technique is limited, reversing the direction of packing and pulling muscle from the sphenoid sinus into the optic strut eliminated a complication that occurred in 40% of patients with standard packing techniques.

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