Top Banner
Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery
29

Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Apr 01, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Endoscopic and Combined Approaches

Ruth E. Bristol, MD

Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery

Page 2: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Acknowledgements

• Maggie Bobrowitz, RN, MBA• HH team• Harold Rekate, MD• Adib Abla, MD• Patients and Families

Page 3: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Outline

• How do we choose the right surgery?• What does “endoscopic” mean?

• How an endoscope works• Choosing the endoscopic approach• Risks

• What does “combined” mean?• Why we choose a combined approach

Page 4: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

How Do We Get There?

Blow up of lesion

Page 5: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Patient Selection

• Type II, III, and IV: Endoscopic +

• Type III and IV: Combined

Page 6: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

What Is An Endoscope?

Camera

Working end

Page 7: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Risks of Treatment

• Memory loss

• Hypothalamic injury• Increased appetite• Diabetes inispidus• Other hormonal abnormalities

• Vascular injuries (stroke)

• Cranial nerve

Page 8: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Case 1

Page 9: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Endoscopic Video

Page 10: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Post-op: Resection Cavity

Page 11: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Endoscopy

• Endoscope approaching lesion from side contralateral to attachment.

• Micromanipulator on the endoscope, and stereotactic guidance frame.

Page 12: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Terms

• Contralateral• Ipsilateral

Page 13: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Endoscopic

• Pros• Comparable seizure

control (49% vs 54%)• Shorter length of stays

(4.1 vs 7.7 days)

• Cons• Short term memory

loss• Less working room

(bad for large lesions)• Thalamic infarct

reported (~85 % asymptomatic)

Page 14: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Endoscopic

• Background

Page 15: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Surgery From Above

• Endoscopic series• 37 patients with refractory seizures• Mean age of onset approx 10 months of age• 62 % with IQ < 70• Always a contralateral approach

Ng, Rekate et al. Neurology 2008

Page 16: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Open Vs. Endoscopic

• Percent of disconnect/resection• Not statistically tied to seizure-free rate• 100% resection gave 100% seizure-free postop course in 8 of 12

• Compared to open approach• Endoscopic: Shorter stay: 4.5 versus 7.7 days

• Comparable seizure-free rates: 49 % vs. 54 % (endo vs. TC)

• Tumors smaller in endoscopic: 1.01 vs 2.43 cc (p=0.0322)

• Reasons to favor open approach• Larger tumors (>1.5 cm) with bilateral attachments• Better for children younger than adolescent age

Page 17: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Seizure Control

Abla et al., AANS Philadelphia. May 3, 2010

Page 18: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Case 2

• 7 yo female• Gelastic epilepsy• Behavioral problems

(impulsivity)• Rapid progression of

seizures in summer

Page 19: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Case 2 Post op

Page 20: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Case 3

• 20 months old• Multiple medical

problems• Gelastic epilepsy

Page 21: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Case 3 Post op

Page 22: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Endoscopic Approach

Page 23: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Combined Approach

Page 24: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Combined Video

Page 25: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Combined Approach

Page 26: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Outcome

• Seizure freedom: 29-49%• Seizure Reduction: 55-73%• In older patients, higher IQ correlated with better

chance of seizure freedom• Memory loss 8% permanent• Adults had more complications than children

Page 27: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Complications

• Postoperative DI• Usually transient (< 1 week). DDAVP given in ICU

• Weight gain (satiety center = VMH)• 19%

• Short-term memory loss• Transient

• 58 % in TC group / 14 % in endoscopic group (< 2 wks)

• Permanent• ~ 8 % in both (2/26 and 3/37)Ng, Rekate et al. Epilepsia 2006

Page 28: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

SMALL LARGE

Type I OZ OZ

Gamma Knife (stable)

Type II Endoscopic Transcallosal

Gamma Knife (bilateral, clinically stable)

Type III Endoscopic +/- OZ ---

Gamma Knife (stable)

Type IV --- Staged : target main component 1st

BNI Treatment Paradigm

Laser?

Page 29: Endoscopic and Combined Approaches Ruth E. Bristol, MD Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery.

Conclusions

• PROPER SELECTION• No single approach is appropriate or advantageous

for all patients

• Decisions individualized• Surgical anatomy• Presence of acute clinical deterioration