» Articles » PMID: 31807931

Telovelar Surgical Approach

Overview
Journal Neurosurg Rev
Specialty Neurosurgery
Date 2019 Dec 7
PMID 31807931
Citations 13
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Surgical access to lesions in the fourth ventricle may be achieved utilizing transvermian or transtelovelar trajectories. We performed a search of the PubMed database for studies describing the microsurgical details and evaluating the clinical utility of the telovelar surgical approach. The telovelar approach has proven to be a safe, effective, and versatile alternative to the transvermian approach. The operative strategy utilizes midline suboccipital craniotomy without or with C1 laminectomy, followed by cerebellar hemispheric and tonsillar retraction, and wide durotomy. Access is generously provided to the fourth ventricle from calamus scriptorius to Sylvian aqueduct and foramen Luschkae bilaterally. Anatomic dissection studies evaluating and comparing the relative benefits of the operative exposure offered by these approaches have demonstrated improved access to the lateral recess gained by the telovelar trajectory and facilitated exposure of rostral reaches of the fourth ventricle by the vermian trajectory. In general, operative exposure may be significantly improved with tonsillar retraction or resection, bilateral telovelar opening, and performing C1 laminectomy in order to improve access to the rostral fourth ventricle, which may be variably combined depending on location of pathology. Cerebellar mutism, a high incidence of which occurs with vermian approaches, is not commonly observed with use of the telovelar trajectory, though injury to the dentate nuclei may precipitate this syndrome. Deficits incurred with the vermian approach may include cerebellar mutism, dysequilibrium, truncal ataxia, posterior fossa syndrome, cranial nucleopathies and nerve palsies, and vascular injury to the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. The telovelar surgical approach has proven a safe and useful alternative to the transvermian trajectory. A significantly lower incidence of cerebellar mutism and cerebellogenic deficits represents the principal advantage of the telovelar approach. Further studies are necessary in order to prospectively evaluate and compare extents of resection, morbidity, and mortality utilizing the telovelar versus vermian approaches for microsurgically resecting fourth ventricular tumors.

Citing Articles

Dorsally exophytic brain stem ganglioglioma extending to the foramen of Luschka: a case report.

Ucar E, Ozgen U, Kiris T J Med Case Rep. 2025; 19(1):87.

PMID: 40025555 PMC: 11872322. DOI: 10.1186/s13256-025-05128-y.


Surgery for pediatric low-grade gliomas within the vermis.

Bianchi F, Ceccarelli G, Tamburrini G Childs Nerv Syst. 2024; 40(10):3173-3178.

PMID: 39046475 DOI: 10.1007/s00381-024-06545-y.


Endoscopic Cylinder Surgery for Ventricular Lesions.

Takeuchi K Adv Tech Stand Neurosurg. 2024; 52:91-104.

PMID: 39017788 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-61925-0_7.


The telovelar approach for fourth ventricular tumors in children: is removal of the posterior arch of C1 necessary?.

Cho A, Lippolis M, Herta J, Dogan M, Hedrich C, Azizi A Childs Nerv Syst. 2024; 40(9):2707-2711.

PMID: 38703239 PMC: 11322403. DOI: 10.1007/s00381-024-06443-3.


Treatment of brainstem and fourth ventricle lesions by the full neuroendoscopic telovelar approach.

Zhou L, Wei H, Li Z, Zhang H, Song P, Cheng L Eur J Med Res. 2023; 28(1):564.

PMID: 38053193 PMC: 10696709. DOI: 10.1186/s40001-023-01460-5.


References
1.
Fulton J, Dow R . The Cerebellum: A Summary of Functional Localization. Yale J Biol Med. 2011; 10(1):89-119. PMC: 2601804. View

2.
Wen D, Heros R . Surgical approaches to the brain stem. Neurosurg Clin N Am. 1993; 4(3):457-68. View

3.
Rekate H, Grubb R, Aram D, Hahn J, Ratcheson R . Muteness of cerebellar origin. Arch Neurol. 1985; 42(7):697-8. DOI: 10.1001/archneur.1985.04060070091023. View

4.
Dailey A, McKhann 2nd G, Berger M . The pathophysiology of oral pharyngeal apraxia and mutism following posterior fossa tumor resection in children. J Neurosurg. 1995; 83(3):467-75. DOI: 10.3171/jns.1995.83.3.0467. View

5.
Dietze Jr D, Mickle J . Cerebellar mutism after posterior fossa surgery. Pediatr Neurosurg. 1990; 16(1):25-31; discussion 31. DOI: 10.1159/000120499. View