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Neuroendoscopic treatment for colloid cysts of the third ventricle: the experience of a decade.
Neurosurgery 2003 March
OBJECTIVE: Microsurgical resection or ventriculoperitoneal shunt placement was for a long time the only means of treatment for patients with colloid cysts. In the past few years, however, endoscopic procedures have gained increasing significance and have been used more widely. Long-term results are now available for the first time, which enabled us to evaluate this method and assess its future relevance.
METHODS: Twenty patients with symptomatic colloid cysts of the third ventricle have been treated endoscopically in our department during the past 10 years. Retrospective analysis and follow-up of the patients' clinical and radiological outcomes were performed.
RESULTS: In the early postoperative period, 18 patients had excellent outcomes, with clinical signs improving immediately. One patient experienced intraoperative hemorrhage followed by temporary postoperative psychosis and IIIrd cranial nerve palsy. Another patient remained shunt-dependent because of aseptic meningitis after the endoscopic procedure. In the long-term follow-up, one patient had to be reoperated to treat cyst recurrence. The operative time was strongly dependent on the cyst material as well as on the surgeon's experience with endoscopic techniques; it varied between 60 and 300 minutes (mean operative time, 200 min). The average hospitalization time was 9 days. Long-term follow-up ranging from 1 to 10 years showed a clear benefit in each patient. In three individuals with pre- and postoperative short-term memory deficits and in one patient who complained of headaches, symptoms resolved gradually during the first few months after surgery. The patient with intraoperative hemorrhage complained of slight permanent short-time memory deficit. The analysis of postoperative computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging scans revealed a remaining cyst wall in the majority of patients and an inconsistent decrease in ventricular size. Postoperative cine magnetic resonance imaging studies showed normalization of cerebrospinal fluid flow in 17 patients.
CONCLUSION: Continued improvement of endoscopic techniques and instruments, together with good long-term results in endoscopically treated patients, have established this method as an alternative to microsurgical techniques and might even set a new standard for treatment.
METHODS: Twenty patients with symptomatic colloid cysts of the third ventricle have been treated endoscopically in our department during the past 10 years. Retrospective analysis and follow-up of the patients' clinical and radiological outcomes were performed.
RESULTS: In the early postoperative period, 18 patients had excellent outcomes, with clinical signs improving immediately. One patient experienced intraoperative hemorrhage followed by temporary postoperative psychosis and IIIrd cranial nerve palsy. Another patient remained shunt-dependent because of aseptic meningitis after the endoscopic procedure. In the long-term follow-up, one patient had to be reoperated to treat cyst recurrence. The operative time was strongly dependent on the cyst material as well as on the surgeon's experience with endoscopic techniques; it varied between 60 and 300 minutes (mean operative time, 200 min). The average hospitalization time was 9 days. Long-term follow-up ranging from 1 to 10 years showed a clear benefit in each patient. In three individuals with pre- and postoperative short-term memory deficits and in one patient who complained of headaches, symptoms resolved gradually during the first few months after surgery. The patient with intraoperative hemorrhage complained of slight permanent short-time memory deficit. The analysis of postoperative computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging scans revealed a remaining cyst wall in the majority of patients and an inconsistent decrease in ventricular size. Postoperative cine magnetic resonance imaging studies showed normalization of cerebrospinal fluid flow in 17 patients.
CONCLUSION: Continued improvement of endoscopic techniques and instruments, together with good long-term results in endoscopically treated patients, have established this method as an alternative to microsurgical techniques and might even set a new standard for treatment.
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