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Monday, October 26, 2020

Endoscopic Transnasal Odontoidectomy for Ventral Decompression of the Craniovertebral Junction: Surgical Technique and Clinical Outcome in a Case Series of 19 Patients.

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Endoscopic Transnasal Odontoidectomy for Ventral Decompression of the Craniovertebral Junction: Surgical Technique and Clinical Outcome in a Case Series of 19 Patients.

Oper Neurosurg (Hagerstown). 2020 Oct 22;:

Authors: Butenschoen VM, Wostrack M, Meyer B, Gempt J

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Abnormalities and pathologies of the craniovertebral junction as well as space-occupying lesions of the odontoid process can result in myelopathy symptoms. A staged procedure with posterior stabilization and anterior transnasal endoscopic decompression is recently considered a less invasive alternative to the transoral approach. We present a considerably large case series focused on the operative technique and the long-term neurological clinical outcome.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the safety and efficacy of odontoidectomy performed via an endoscopic transnasal approach.
METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed all patients treated in our neurosurgical department from January 2009 to January 2020. Demographics, pre- and postoperative clinical status, and operative technique and complications were extracted and analyzed.
RESULTS: In total, 22 transnasal operations were performed in 19 patients from January 2009 to January 2020. All but one patient underwent posterior C1-C2 instrumentation prior to the anterior transnasal computed tomography (CT)-navigated full-endoscopic decompression. The median duration of symptoms before surgery was 3 mo. Complications occurred in 1 patient who died from septic organ failure because of his initial diagnosis of osteomyelitis. Postoperative CT imaging showed sufficient decompression in 16 patients, and 3 patients underwent a transnasal endoscopic re-decompression (16%).
CONCLUSION: Transnasal endoscopic odontoidectomy presents a safe procedure with a satisfying clinical and radiological postoperative outcome.

PMID: 33094804 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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