Topographic anatomy of the cochlear nuclear region at the floor of the fourth ventricle in humans
Autor: | Ralf Quester, Roland Schröder |
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Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Cochlear Nucleus Microsurgery Indoles medicine.medical_treatment Central nervous system Cerebellopontine Angle Deafness Fourth ventricle Cochlear nucleus Cerebral Ventricles Prosthesis Implantation Fixatives Cerebellum Formaldehyde Oxazines medicine Humans Coloring Agents Hematoxylin Aged Fluorescent Dyes Paraffin Embedding business.industry Anatomy Middle Aged Vestibulocochlear Nerve Cerebellopontine angle Benzoxazines Lateral recess medicine.anatomical_structure Eosine Yellowish-(YS) Brainstem business Auditory brainstem implant Brain Stem |
Zdroj: | Journal of neurosurgery. 91(3) |
ISSN: | 0022-3085 |
Popis: | Object. The development of appropriate methods to stimulate the dorsal and ventral cochlear nucleus by means of an auditory brainstem implant in patients with acquired bilateral anacusis requires a detailed topoanatomical knowledge both of the location and extension of the nuclear surface in the fourth ventricle and lateral recess and of its variability. The goal of this study was to provide that information. Anatomically, it is possible to use a midline surgical approach to the fourth ventricle rather than the translabyrinthine and suboccipital routes of access used hitherto. This is especially useful if severe scarring, which occurs as a result of tumor removal in the cerebellopontine angle, make the orientation and placement of an auditory brainstem implant via a lateral surgical approach difficult. There have been only a few studies, involving single cases and small series of patients, in which the focus was the exact extension of the cochlear nuclei, whose microsurgically relevant position in relation to the surface structures is not known in detail.Methods. Landmarks that are important for the placement of an auditory brainstem implant through the fourth ventricle were examined and measured in a large series of 28 formalin-fixed human brainstems. In all cases, these examinations were supplemented by addition of a histological section series. For the first time values of unfixed fresh brainstem tissue were determined. Anatomical features are discussed with regard to their possible neurosurgical relevance, taking into account inter- and intraindividual variability.Conclusions. The midline approach would provide an opportunity to stimulate the whole area of the dorsal as well as the ventral cochlear nucleus with an auditory brainstem implant. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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