TY - JOUR
T1 - Surgical treatment of paraventricular cavernous angioma
T2 - Fibre tracking for visualizing the corticospinal tract and determining surgical approach
AU - Niizuma, Kuniyasu
AU - Fujimura, Miki
AU - Kumabe, Toshihiro
AU - Higano, Shuichi
AU - Tominaga, Teiji
PY - 2006/12
Y1 - 2006/12
N2 - Surgical treatment of deep-seated lesions involving the corticospinal tract is one of the most challenging areas of contemporary neurosurgery, even given the recent development of radiological methods including three-dimensional anisotropy contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) axonography. Fibre tracking using diffusion tensor imaging is another MRI technique that can be used to visualize anisotropy and the orientation of white matter tracts in the brain. We report herein a patient with a paraventricular cavernous angioma manifesting as hemiparesis caused by haemorrhage. Preoperative conventional MRI failed to determine the anatomical relationship between the paraventricular lesion and the corticospinal tract, whereas fibre tracking using free software (dTV for MR-DTI analysis) indicated that the corticospinal tract was displaced anterolaterally from the medial side. The paraventricular lesion was completely removed without damaging the corticospinal tract using a transcortical transventricular approach. Preoperative fibre tracking is useful in surgical planning for procedures involving deep-seated lesions adjacent to the corticospinal tract, and may avoid postoperative morbidity due to corticospinal tract injury.
AB - Surgical treatment of deep-seated lesions involving the corticospinal tract is one of the most challenging areas of contemporary neurosurgery, even given the recent development of radiological methods including three-dimensional anisotropy contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) axonography. Fibre tracking using diffusion tensor imaging is another MRI technique that can be used to visualize anisotropy and the orientation of white matter tracts in the brain. We report herein a patient with a paraventricular cavernous angioma manifesting as hemiparesis caused by haemorrhage. Preoperative conventional MRI failed to determine the anatomical relationship between the paraventricular lesion and the corticospinal tract, whereas fibre tracking using free software (dTV for MR-DTI analysis) indicated that the corticospinal tract was displaced anterolaterally from the medial side. The paraventricular lesion was completely removed without damaging the corticospinal tract using a transcortical transventricular approach. Preoperative fibre tracking is useful in surgical planning for procedures involving deep-seated lesions adjacent to the corticospinal tract, and may avoid postoperative morbidity due to corticospinal tract injury.
KW - Cavernous angioma
KW - Corticospinal tract
KW - Diffusion tensor imaging
KW - Fibre tracking
KW - Magnetic resonance imaging
KW - Paraventricular region
KW - Surgical approach
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jocn.2004.11.025
DO - 10.1016/j.jocn.2004.11.025
M3 - Article
C2 - 17070685
AN - SCOPUS:33750991887
SN - 0967-5868
VL - 13
SP - 1028
EP - 1032
JO - Journal of Clinical Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Clinical Neuroscience
IS - 10
ER -