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Intraoperative high‐field magnetic resonance imaging, multimodal neuronavigation, and intraoperative electrophysiological monitoring‐guided surgery for treating supratentorial cavernomas
Author(s) -
Li Fangye,
Chen Xiaolei,
Xu Bainan
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chronic diseases and translational medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2589-0514
DOI - 10.1016/j.cdtm.2016.11.003
Subject(s) - neuronavigation , medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , intraoperative mri , radiology , multimodal therapy , surgical planning , surgery , interventional magnetic resonance imaging
Objective To determine the beneficial effects of intraoperative high‐field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), multimodal neuronavigation, and intraoperative electrophysiological monitoring‐guided surgery for treating supratentorial cavernomas. Methods Twelve patients with 13 supratentorial cavernomas were prospectively enrolled and operated while using a 1.5 T intraoperative MRI, multimodal neuronavigation, and intraoperative electrophysiological monitoring. All cavernomas were deeply located in subcortical areas or involved critical areas. Intraoperative high‐field MRIs were obtained for the intraoperative “visualization” of surrounding eloquent structures, “brain shift” corrections, and navigational plan updates. Results All cavernomas were successfully resected with guidance from intraoperative MRI, multimodal neuronavigation, and intraoperative electrophysiological monitoring. In 5 cases with supratentorial cavernomas, intraoperative “brain shift” severely deterred locating of the lesions; however, intraoperative MRI facilitated precise locating of these lesions. During long‐term (>3 months) follow‐up, some or all presenting signs and symptoms improved or resolved in 4 cases, but were unchanged in 7 patients. Conclusions Intraoperative high‐field MRI, multimodal neuronavigation, and intraoperative electrophysiological monitoring are helpful in surgeries for the treatment of small deeply seated subcortical cavernomas.

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