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Objective: The endoscopic superior eyelid transorbital approach has garnered significant consideration and gained popularity in recent years. Detailed anatomical knowledge along with clinical experience has allowed refinement of the technique as well as expansion of its indications. Using bone as a consistent reference, the authors identified five main bone pillars that offer access to the different intracranial targeted areas for different pathologies of the skull base, with the aim of enhancing the understanding of the intracranial areas accessible through this corridor.
Methods: The authors present a bone-oriented review of the anatomy of the transorbital approach in which they conducted a 3D analysis using Brainlab software and performed dry skull and subsequent cadaveric dissections.
Results: Five bone pillars of the transorbital approach were identified: the lesser sphenoid wing, the sagittal crest (medial aspect of the greater sphenoid wing), the anterior clinoid, the middle cranial fossa, and the petrous apex. The associations of these bone targets with their respective intracranial areas are reported in detail.
Conclusions: Identification of consistent bone references after the skin incision has been made and the working space is determined allows a comprehensive understanding of the anatomy of the approach in order to safely and effectively perform transorbital endoscopic surgery in the skull base.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2024.1.FOCUS23846 | DOI Listing |
No Shinkei Geka
July 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Dokkyo Medical University.
Trigeminal schwannomas are rare, benign tumors with diverse extension patterns along the trigeminal nerve, which significantly influence surgical approach selection. This article presents strategies for selecting optimal approaches based on tumor location, classified into middle, posterior, and extracranial compartments. Commonly used approaches include the anterior transpetrosal, epidural and interdural approaches, and recently introduced minimally invasive techniques, such as the endoscopic endonasal transmaxillary-pterygoid and transorbital approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOper Neurosurg
August 2025
Skull base and rhino-orbital Surgery Unit, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana, Pisa, Italy.
Oper Neurosurg
August 2025
South Australian Institute of Ophthalmology, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Oper Neurosurg
July 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital Clinic de Barcelona, Barcelona , Spain.
Background And Objectives: The supraoptic recess is a bony pyramid-shape area with a base that abuts the sphenoid sinus and an apex that corresponds intracranially to the anterior clinoid process and the body of the lesser sphenoid wing. During an extended endoscopic endonasal approach, the recess needs to be identified and delineated to achieve further lateral extension over the planum sphenoidale. By drilling the supraoptic recess in a medial-to-lateral direction toward the body of the lesser sphenoid wing, the most medial portion of the lesser wing overlying the orbit could be exposed and progressively drilled out.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Spine
June 2025
Neurosurgical Unit, Ospedale Moriggia Pelascini, Gravedona e Uniti, Italy.
Introduction: Orbital cavernous malformations (OCMs) are benign vascular lesions frequently associated with progressive proptosis and visual disturbances due to their slow growth and compression of adjacent structures. Multiple surgical approaches have been developed for their treatment, including microsurgical transfacial-transorbital approaches (MTTAs), cranio-orbital approaches (MCOAs), orbitotomies (MOs), endoscopic endonasal approaches (EEAs), and endoscopic transorbital approaches (ETOAs). However, the optimal approach remains a topic of debate.
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