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Journal ArticleDOI

Pediatric pineal tumors: need for a direct surgical approach and complications of the occipital transtentorial approach.

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TLDR
It was shown that 80% of pediatric pineal tumors needed direct surgical approaches and that the majority were successfully removed by OTT surgery with an acceptable level of risk.
Abstract
In an investigation of the benefits and risks of direct surgical approaches to pediatric pineal tumors, the need for such approaches, the feasibility of surgical removal and operative complications were evaluated in 25 histologically proven cases. Five tumors were germinomas (GEs) or GE-predominant mixed germ cell tumors (GCTs), in which stereotactic biopsy can be adequate. Twenty of the 25 pineal tumors (80%) were teratomas (TEs), TE-predominant mixed GCTs or other tumors that need direct surgical approaches. Among the 21 tumors resected by the occipital transtentorial (OTT) approach, 13 were removed radically (>95%) and 6 others, subtotally (>75%). Complications of using the OTT approach included homonymous hemianopsia (7), Parinaud's syndrome (6), other eyeball movement limitation (7), seizure (5), and new hydrocephalus (3). The majority of these were transient, resolving within a few days or months, or easily controlled. The results showed that 80% of pediatric pineal tumors needed direct surgical approaches and that the majority were successfully removed by OTT surgery with an acceptable level of risk.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microsurgical management of pineal region lesions: personal experience with 119 patients

TL;DR: The ITSC route is a safe and effective surgical approach, associated with low morbidity, complete lesion removal, and definitive histopathologic diagnosis, and it is believed that the surgical treatment can be offered in most cases as the first treatment option for pineal tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical strategies for treating patients with pineal region tumors.

TL;DR: The role of surgical debulking in the management of pineal tumors is clearly defined for some tumors but is less evident for others and management strategies using stereotactic biopsy, endoscopy, and radiosurgery can also provide favorable outcomes in some cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Posterior interhemispheric approach: surgical technique, application to vascular lesions, and benefits of gravity retraction.

TL;DR: The posterior interhemispheric approach, without additional dural cuts, is appropriate for most vascular lesions in the posterior midline and Gravity retracts the occipital lobes when patients are positioned laterally, enhancing operative exposure and reducing morbidity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pineal region tumors: simultaneous endoscopic third ventriculostomy and tumor biopsy.

TL;DR: Simultaneous ETV and tumor biopsy is a valuable technique that can be used to manage hydrocephalus and establish diagnosis in patients with newly diagnosed pineal region tumors, potentially avoiding traditional craniotomy and ventriculoperitoneal shunt placement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical approaches to pineal region tumors.

TL;DR: Based on the operative experience with 57 patients over a 20-year period, it is concluded that the Infratentorial Supracerebellar and Parieto-Occipital Paramedian Transtentorial approaches provide excellent exposure while allowing minimally invasive, relatively low risk access to the majority of pineal region tumors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intracranial germ-cell tumors in children

TL;DR: The authors recommend resection of pineal and suprasellar germ-cell tumors in order to firmly establish an accurate histological diagnosis to guide the extent of adjuvant therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pineal region tumors in children.

TL;DR: The authors believe that the preferred treatment for pineal region tumors in children requires definitive surgery with a histological diagnosis and that a conservative approach consisting of shunting and radiation therapy no longer seems to be appropriate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical management of pineal region tumors.

TL;DR: The tumors displayed considerable histological diversity with germ cell tumors most common, followd by glial cell tumors and pineal cell tumors (23%).
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-Quarter Prone Approach to the Pineal-Tentorial Region

TL;DR: A three-quarter prone, operative approach to the pineal region is described: the three- quarter prone, operated-side-down position, which provides a comfortable position for the surgeon and assistant, minimal retraction of the parietal-occipital lobe, and access to the third ventricle, Pineal region, midbrain, and superior vermis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuro-ophthalmological function of patients with pineal region tumors approached transtentorially in the semisitting position

TL;DR: To optimize orientation and operative exposure for aggressive resection, the authors approached pineal region tumors transtentorially with the patient in a semisitting position to document operative ocular morbidity referable to the brain stem as well as visual deficits secondary to occipital lobe retraction.
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