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Journal ArticleDOI

Neuroendoscopic biopsy of pediatric brain tumors with small ventricle

TLDR
Navigational tracking improved the accuracy of the neuroendoscopic approach and minimized brain trauma in pediatric patients without hydrocephalus, and the absence of ventriculomegaly in patients with brain tumor may not serve as a contraindication to neuro endoscopic tumor biopsy.
Abstract
Intraventricular endoscopic procedures to resect or biopsy peri- or intraventricular tumors may have not been used in patients with small ventricles due to the presumed difficulties with ventricular cannulation and the perceived risk of morbidity. The purpose of this study is to review the feasibility and safety of neuroendoscopic procedures in the biopsy of pediatric brain tumors with a small ventricle. Between January 2006 and January 2013, 72 children were identified with brain tumors confirmed by transventricular endoscopic biopsy. Patients were divided into non-hydrocephalus and hydrocephalus groups, and the ratio of the two groups was 20:52. In 20 pediatric brain tumors with small ventricle, the targeted lesion was successfully approached under the guidance of neuronavigation. Navigational tracking was especially helpful in entering small ventricles and in approaching the third ventricle through the narrow foramen of Monro. The histopathologic diagnosis was established in all 20 patients: nine germinomas, three mixed germ cell tumors, two pilomyxoid astrocytomas, and two pilocytic astrocytomas. The tumor biopsy sites were the suprasellar area (n = 10), pineal area (n = 4), lateral ventricular wall (n = 4), and mammillary body (n = 1). There were no major morbidities related to the endoscopic procedure. Neuroendoscopic biopsy or resection of peri- or intraventricular tumors in pediatric patients without hydrocephalus is feasible. Navigation-guided neuroendoscopic procedures improved the accuracy of the neuroendoscopic approach and minimized brain trauma. The absence of ventriculomegaly in patients with brain tumor may not serve as a contraindication to neuroendoscopic tumor biopsy.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Presurgical and Intraoperative Augmented Reality in Neuro-Oncologic Surgery: Clinical Experiences and Limitations

TL;DR: AR/VR were found to be qualitatively advantageous due to enhanced visualization of complex anatomy and improved intraoperative lesion localization in neurosurgical procedures for resection of cranial tumours.
Journal ArticleDOI

Initial experience with endoscopic ultrasonic aspirator in purely neuroendoscopic removal of intraventricular tumors

TL;DR: Endoscopic ultrasonic aspiration proved to be a safe and reliable method for achieving extensive decompression or complete removal in the management of intra- and/or paraventricular lesions in pediatric patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Augmented reality in intraventricular neuroendoscopy

TL;DR: Augmented reality-navigated neuroendoscopy is accurate and feasible to use in clinical application by integrating relevant planning information directly into the endoscope’s field of view, safety and efficacy for intraventricular neuroendoscopic surgery may be improved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnostic Yield, Morbidity, and Mortality of Intraventricular Neuroendoscopic Biopsy: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: It is indicated that neuroendoscopic biopsy has a very good diagnostic yield and reasonably low complication rate and seems most advantageous for diagnosis of intraventricular lesions where cerebrospinal fluid diversion is an additional therapeutic requirement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuroendoscopic surgery in children: does age at intervention influence safety and efficacy? A single-center experience.

TL;DR: Intraventricular endoscopy is a safe neurosurgical intervention in pediatric patients of all ages, although it might be associated with increased shunt rates after endoscopic surgery, specifically ETV, in younger infants.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The safety and efficacy of stereotactic biopsy for intracranial lesions.

TL;DR: Stereotactic brain biopsy is considered by many physicians to have significant morbidity and mortality rates with a high risk of sampling error resulting in misdiagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frontal and Occipital Horn Ratio: A Linear Estimate of Ventricular Size for Multiple Imaging Modalities in Pediatric Hydrocephalus

TL;DR: The frontal and occipital horn ratio is a simple method of evaluating ventricular size in pediatric hydrocephalus patients with CSF shunts and accounts for often disproportionate occipitals expansion in pediatric patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuroendoscopic approach to intraventricular lesions

TL;DR: It was possible to achieve relief of noncommunicating hydrocephalus, tumor resections, and even complete tumor removals by using endoscopic techniques, and the authors believe that endoscope techniques should be considered in the treatment of selected intraventricular lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frameless image-guided stereotactic brain biopsy procedure: diagnostic yield, surgical morbidity, and comparison with the frame-based technique.

TL;DR: The frameless stereotactic biopsy procedure was found to be comparable to or better than the frame-based method, and may represent a more efficient means of obtaining biopsy specimens of cortical lesions but is otherwise similar to the frame.
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