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Management of the Facial Nerve in Lateral Skull Base Surgery Analytic Retrospective study
Author(s) -
Mohamed Abdallah Shazly,
Mahmoud A.M. Mokbel,
Amr Arafa Elbadry,
Hatem Badran
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
clinical medicine insights ear nose and throat
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1179-5506
DOI - 10.4137/cment.s6570
Subject(s) - medicine , infratemporal fossa , surgery , facial nerve , jugular foramen , cranial nerves , translabyrinthine approach , facial weakness , internal carotid artery , skull , weakness , radiology , cerebellopontine angle , magnetic resonance imaging
Surgical approaches to the jugular foramen are often complex and lengthy procedures associated with significant morbidity based on the anatomic and tumor characteristics. In addition to the risk of intra-operative hemorrhage from vascular tumors, lower cranial nerves deficits are frequently increased after intra-operative manipulation. Accordingly, modifications in the surgical techniques have been developed to minimize these risks. Preoperative embolization and intra-operative ligation of the external carotid artery have decreased the intraoperative blood loss. Accurate identification and exposure of the cranial nerves extracranially allows for their preservation during tumor resection. The modification of facial nerve mobilization provides widened infratemporal exposure with less postoperative facial weakness. The ideal approach should enable complete, one stage tumor resection with excellent infratemporal and posterior fossa exposure and would not aggravate or cause neurologic deficit. The aim of this study is to present our experience in handling jugular foramen lesions (mainly glomus jugulare) without the need for anterior facial nerve transposition.

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