Skull Base 1998; 8(2): 57-64
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1058576
Original Articles

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Venous Reconstruction in Surgery of Meningiomas Invading the Sagittal and Transverse Sinuses

Marc Sindou, P. Hallacq
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
03 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

Surgery of meningiomas involving major dural sinuses leaves the surgeon confronted with a difficult dilemma: leave the fragment invading the sinus in place and have a higher risk of recurrence, or attempt a total removal with or without venous reconstruction and expose the patient to a potentially greater operative danger. The authors report a series of 47 meningiomas (41 of the sagittal sinus, 4 of the transverse sinus and 2 of the torcular) in whom gross total removal was achieved in all cases, and venous reconstruction (of various types) attempted in a majority. Thirty-nine patients had a good outcome and resumed their previous activities. There was a permanent neurological deficit in five due to infarction secondary to injury of central veins (all in the sagittal sinus midthird). Three patients died from brain swelling; all with meningioma totally occluding the sinus and in whom resection was achieved without sinus reconstruction. There were two recurrences in this series which has a mean follow-up of 7.5 years.

The authors' surgical experience led them to favor whenever possible, total removal with sinus reconstruction, using a patch for meningiomas with partial sinus invasion and a venous bypass for those with total sinus occlusion.

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