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Facial Nerve Outcomes Following Total Excision of Vestibular Schwannoma by the Enlarged Translabyrinthine Approach

Authors :
Enrico Piccirillo
Ashish Vashishth
Mastronardi Valentina
Manjunath Dandinarasaiah
Sampath Chandra Prasad
Corneliu Mircea Codreanu
Golda Grinblat
Mario Sanna
Source :
Otology & Neurotology. 40:226-235
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2019.

Abstract

Objective To study the early and late facial nerve (FN) outcomes in different tumor classes in addition to determining the predictive factors for the same. Study design A retrospective clinical study. Setting A quaternary referral otology and skull base center. Patients and methods A retrospective study of 1983 cases of vestibular schwannomas (VSs) with preoperative normal FN function, undergoing total excision with anatomical preservation of the nerve by enlarged translabyrinthine approach (ETLA) were included. FN status was recorded postoperatively at day 1, at discharge, and at 1-year follow-up and were analyzed in different tumor sizes. Results At 1 year, 988 patients with House-Brackmann (H-B) grade I and II FN at day 1 after surgery, 958 (96.9%) maintained their status up-to 1 year. Of the 216 patients with H-B grade III at day 1 after surgery, 113 (52.3%) improved to H-B grade I and II. Similarly, of the 779 patients with H-B grade IV and VI FN function at day 1 after surgery, improvement to H-B III and H-B I and II were noted in 442 (56.7%) and 80 (10.3%) of patients, respectively. Intrameatal and extrameatal tumors upto 2 cm showed better recovery from H-B grade III to H-B I and II and from H-B grade IV and VI to H-B I and III when compared with extrameatal tumors >2 cm (p = 0.001). Conclusion Tumors of smaller sizes have good immediate postoperative FN results and recover well at the end of 1 year while more than 3 cm have poor outcomes and recover poorly at the end of 1 year. When the VSs reaches more than 1 cm, the HB I and II outcomes drop significantly.

Details

ISSN :
15374505 and 15317129
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Otology & Neurotology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....218eb4f795543bf095551606c1477db2