• World Neurosurg · Aug 2017

    Clinical Trial

    Falcine meningiomas: Analysis of the impact of radiological tumor extensions and proposal of a modified preoperative radiological classification scheme.

    • Kuntal Kanti Das, Jaskaran Singh Gosal, Pradeep Sharma, Anant Mehrotra, Kamlesh Bhaisora, Jayesh Sardhara, Arun Srivastava, Awadhesh Kumar Jaiswal, Raj Kumar, and Sanjay Behari.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow, India. Electronic address: drkuntalkantidas@gmail.com.
    • World Neurosurg. 2017 Aug 1; 104: 248-258.

    BackgroundAlthough extensively studied, few papers have specifically addressed the surgical implications of horizontal and vertical tumor extensions in falcine meningioma (FM). The available classification systems do not address these tumor extensions and thus do not characterize FM in their entirety.ObjectiveTo determine the influence of radiologic tumor extensions on the clinicoradiologic and surgical aspects of FM, propose a new preoperative radiologic scheme for these tumors, and report our surgical outcomes.MethodsThirty-five patients with FM (mean age, 50.03 years; male/female ratio, 16:19) were classified into unilateral conventional (type I; n = 17), unilateral high (type II; n = 9) and bilateral FM (type III; n = 9) based on the coronal magnetic resonance imaging findings. We excluded the primary parasagittal meningiomas from our analysis.ResultsType II and III tumors were more common in males (unlike the overall cohort), presented more often with seizures, and were associated with less favorable postoperative outcomes. Preoperative motor weakness was almost exclusively seen with the unilateral tumors (type I/II). Preexisting weakness (P = 0.02) was a strong predictor of the likelihood of postoperative motor power worsening, the major surgical complication in our series (n = 9; 25.7%). New-onset postoperative weakness (n = 2) recovered completely, whereas worsening of the preexisting weakness showed only a partial improvement (n = 6).ConclusionsThe proposed classification scheme characterizes FMs comprehensively. Bilaterality and parasagittal extensions in FMs affect their clinical presentation, increase surgical difficulty, and influence the surgical outcome adversely. Preexisting motor weakness portends a poor postoperative motor outcome.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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