2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2019.06.001
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Unilateral Occipital Transtentorial Approach with Multimodal Assistance for Resection of Large Supracerebellar Hemangioblastomas: Preliminary Experience of 2 Cases

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The preferred surgical approach to the upper, anterior part of the cerebellum is still controversial. The OTA and SCITA are the most commonly used among the various reported surgical approaches [5,[7][8][9]11,20,24,26,27,33] and the subtemporal transtentorial approach is used for some limited cases. [2,3] We performed the OTA for 3 tentorial and 2 quadrigeminal hemangioblastomas with midline location, and the SCITA for one tentorial hemangioblastomas with lateral extension.…”
Section: Classi Cations Of Cerebellar Hemangioblastomas Based On the Venous Drainage Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The preferred surgical approach to the upper, anterior part of the cerebellum is still controversial. The OTA and SCITA are the most commonly used among the various reported surgical approaches [5,[7][8][9]11,20,24,26,27,33] and the subtemporal transtentorial approach is used for some limited cases. [2,3] We performed the OTA for 3 tentorial and 2 quadrigeminal hemangioblastomas with midline location, and the SCITA for one tentorial hemangioblastomas with lateral extension.…”
Section: Classi Cations Of Cerebellar Hemangioblastomas Based On the Venous Drainage Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[6,13,34] Various surgical approaches for cerebellar hemangioblastoma are adopted according to tumor location. [1,[7][8][9][10][11]15,20,21,33] Cerebellar hemangioblastomas present unique operative challenges, despite current advances in microneurosurgical techniques, such as the narrow and deep surgical corridor in the posterior fossa, inability to debulk the tumor mass due to hypervascularity, di culty in early access to the feeding artery behind the tumor, and interference by large tortuous draining veins during the resection. [8][9][10]19,21] Consequently, selection of the optimal surgical approach and operative planning is quite important to access the pial surface and achieve panoramic exposure of the circumferential entire margin of the lesion for early management of the cortical feeding artery and identi cation of the main draining system.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[17][18][19][20] Kawauchi et al reported the efficacy of the combined use of a microscope and an endoscope to remove supracerebellar hemangioblastomas. 21) In these reports, the panoramic view and minimal invasiveness have been emphasized as the advantages. There is only one report regarding endoscopic OTA for a cerebellar lesion, 22) where its feasibility was mainly shown using a computed tomography (CT) angiogram and cadaveric heads.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%