The Pan African Medical Journal (Sep 2019)

Our surgical experience in foramen magnum meningiomas: clinical series of 11 cases

  • Emre Bilgin,
  • Gökhan Çavus,
  • Vedat Açik,
  • Ali Arslan,
  • Semih Kivanç Olguner,
  • Ismail Istemen,
  • Yurdal Gezercan,
  • Ali Ihsan Ökten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2019.34.5.17536
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 5

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION: We aimed to discuss surgical approaches and results that we applied foramen magnum meningiomas. METHODS: we retrospectively investigated 11 foramen magnum meningioma cases, who had been operated between the dates of February 2012 and March 2017. RESULTS: eight of the patients were females and 3 of the patients were males, the age range was 32-75 and the age average was 60.8. 5 of the tumors were anatomically localized as posterolateral, 2 of them were localized as anterolateral, 2 of them were localized as lateral and 2 of them were localized as anterior according to the brain stem or spinal cord. Posterior far lateral (4 patients) approach including C1 laminoplasty (7 patients) and 1/3 condyle resection was surgically applied to the patients with median suboccipital craniotomy. Gross total excision was applied to 82% of the patients (9 patients) and subtotal mass excision was applied to 18% (2 patients) of the patients. The most frequent post-operative complications were temporary lower cranial nerve (CN IX and X ) palsy in our 2 anterior localized cases (18%) and also cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fistula in our 1 anterior localized case with difficulty in swallowing (dysphagia). Karnofsky scores of the patients, who were followed for 18 months in post-operative 12 and 48 months of average, in the last follow-up were 80 and no post-operative mortality occurred. CONCLUSION: posterior midline suboccipital and far lateral approaches that we apply in our own series were appropriate approaches for foramen magnum meningiomas.

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