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- Davit Baghdasaryan, Marcel Albrecht, Mihr Shahnazaryan, and Steffen Rosahl.
- Department of Neurosurgery, HELIOS Klinikum Erfurt, Erfurt, Germany; Department of Neurosurgery, Yerevan State Medical University, Yerevan, Armenia. Electronic address: d.baghd86@gmail.com.
- World Neurosurg. 2017 Nov 1; 107: 482-487.
ObjectiveTo evaluate efficacy and reliability of intraoperative Doppler sonography in localizing the transverse and sigmoid sinuses during lateral suboccipital craniotomy.MethodsA 16-Mhz intraoperative micro-Doppler ultrasound (16Mhz, Multi-Dop pro, Compumedics, Singen, Germany) was applied to detect the medial border of the sigmoid sinus and the inferior border of the transverse sinus in 25 patients. Micro-Doppler measurements were compared with magnetic resonance- and computed tomography-based image guidance (Kolibri, Brainlab, Munich, Germany). Visual detectability of the sinuses with the operating microscope was also documented.ResultsInadvertent incision of the transverse or sigmoid sinuses did not occur in any patient when the 2 localizing methods have been used in combination. The mean mismatch of image-guided system and micro-Doppler was 2.64 mm (range, 0-6 mm; standard deviation, 1.55 mm). With the microscope the transverse sinus was invisible in 7 patients, the sigmoid sinus was visually undetectable in 1 case. The micro-Doppler indicated blood flow outside the visible borders of the sinuses in 5 patients.ConclusionsA combination of image-guidance and micro-Doppler enhances the accuracy in localizing the margins of the transverse and sigmoid sinuses using the retrosigmoid approach, thus preventing inadvertent injury. The method could potentially be applied during other craniotomies involving the exposure of a venous sinus.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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