scholarly journals Perforating Arteries of the Lemniscal Trigone: A Microsurgical Neuroanatomic Description

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santino Ottavio Tomasi ◽  
Giuseppe Emmanuele Umana ◽  
Gianluca Scalia ◽  
Roberto Luis Rubio-Rodriguez ◽  
Giuseppe Raudino ◽  
...  

Background: The perforating arteries in the dorsolateral zone of the midbrain play a crucial role in the functions of the brain stem. Their damage due to herniation, pathological lesions, or surgery, favored by the narrow tentorial incisura, can lead to hemorrhages or ischemia and subsequently to severe consequences for the patient.Objective: In literature, not much attention has been directed to the perforating arteries in the lemniscus; in fact, no reports on the perforators of this anatomical region are available. The present study aims to a detailed analysis of the microanatomy and the clinical implications of these perforators, in relation to the parent vessels. We focused on the small vessels that penetrate the midbrain's dorsolateral surface, known as lemniscal trigone, to understand better their microanatomy and their functional importance in the clinical practice during the microsurgical approach to this area.Methods: Eighty-seven alcohol-fixed cadaveric hemispheres (44 brains) without any pathological lesions provided the material for studying the perforating vessels and their origin around the dorsolateral midbrain using an operating microscope (OPMI 1 FC, Zeiss). Measurements of the perforators' distances, in relation to the parent vessels, were taken using a digital caliper.Results: An origin from the SCA could be found in 70.11% (61) and from the PCA in 27.58% (24) of the hemispheres. In one hemisphere, an origin from the posterior choroidal artery was found (4.54%). No perforating branches were discovered in 8.04% of specimens (7).Conclusion: The perforating arteries of the lemniscal trigone stem not only from the superior cerebellar artery (SCA), as described in the few studies available in literature, but also from the posterior cerebral artery (PCA). Therefore, special attention should be paid during surgery to spare those vessels and associated perforators. A comprehensive understanding of the lemniscal trigone's perforating arteries is vital to avoid infarction of the brainstem when treating midbrain tumors or vascular malformations.

Neurosurgery ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 711-717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin L. Lazar ◽  
Joel B. Kirkpatrick

Abstract Trigeminal neuralgia is unique to humans. The most common cause seems to be an injury to the myelin of the trigeminal nerve root entry zone as it extends for several millimeters lateral to the pons. Jannetta has developed an elegant retromastoid microsurgical approach to this region. He has identified a compression-distortion phenomenon of this nerve root entry zone, usually from an anomalous position of the superior cerebellar artery. Trigeminal neuralgia can also occur in association with multiple sclerosis, when the plaque lies in this same location. The historical evidence for this explanation is reinforced by the electron microscopic demonstration of the plaque in this region in a patient with multiple sclerosis who was suffering from tic douloureux.


1992 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 799-803 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph H. Piatt ◽  
David A. Clunie

✓ The authors present what is believed to be the first description of an intracranial arterial aneurysm attributable to birth trauma. A male neonate, the product of a precipitious, instrumented, footling breech delivery, exhibited seizures at the age of 18 hours. A computerized tomography scan of the head showed hemorrhage along the tentorium with a globular component at the incisura. Transfontanel Doppler ultrasound examination detected pulsatile arterial flow within the globular mass. Cerebral angiography demonstrated a 1.5-cm saccular aneurysm arising from a small distal branch of the superior cerebellar artery. The pathogenesis of aneurysms in children is obscure and controversial. Birth trauma may be responsible for some pediatric aneurysms that are currently classified as idiopathic or congenital, particularly aneurysms in the region of the tentorial incisura.


Author(s):  
Björn B. Hofmann ◽  
Christian Rubbert ◽  
Bernd Turowski ◽  
Daniel Hänggi ◽  
Sajjad Muhammad

AbstractCurrently, surgical revascularization procedures using intracranial–intracranial (IC-IC) or extracranial–intracranial (EC-IC) bypass and distal clipping or trapping are the valid and rescue treatment modality for extremely rare unilateral distal fusiform superior cerebellar artery (SCA) aneurysms. Yet, in case of bilateral fusiform SCA aneurysms, surgical therapy reaches its limit. Mini-flow diverter devices (FDDs) have only recently become available for treating fusiform aneurysms of such small vessels. We report the unique case of bilateral distal fusiform SCA aneurysms in a 43-year-old man with subarachnoid hemorrhage (Fisher grade IV and World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies [WFNS] grade II) treated with endovascular implantation of bilateral mini-FDDs with excellent outcome and no radiographic signs of infarction. Yet, occlusion of one of the FDDs was found in the follow-up, which again shows the eminent danger of occlusion in case of an implantation of FDDs in such small-caliber vessels, which leaves the discussion about the optimal therapy method open.


1989 ◽  
Vol 236 (8) ◽  
pp. 461-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. Sechi ◽  
A. Pirisi ◽  
V. Agnetti ◽  
M. Piredda ◽  
M. Zuddas ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 715-718 ◽  
Author(s):  
MJHL Mulder ◽  
GJ Lycklama à Nijeholt ◽  
W Dinkelaar ◽  
TPW de Rooij ◽  
ACGM van Es ◽  
...  

We describe a case of intra-arterial treatment (IAT) of acute posterior circulation occlusion in a patient with a persistent primitive trigeminal artery (PPTA). The patient presented with an acute left sided hemiparesis and loss of consciousness (Glasgow coma score of 5). Computed tomography angiography showed an acute occlusion of the right internal carotid artery (ICA), the PPTA, distal basilar artery (BA), right posterior cerebral artery (PCA), and right superior cerebellar artery (SCA). Stent-retriever assisted thrombectomy was not considered possible through the hypoplastic proximal BA. After passage of the proximal ICA occlusion, the right PCA and SCA were recanalized through the PPTA, with a single thrombectomy procedure. Ten days after intervention patient was discharged scoring optimal EMV with only a mild facial and left hand paresis remaining. PPTA is a persistent embryological carotid–basilar connection. Knowledge of existing (embryonic) variants in neurovascular anatomy is essential when planning and performing acute neurointerventional procedures.


Neurosurgery ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 465-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
James I. Ausman ◽  
Fernando G. Diaz ◽  
Balaji Sadasivan ◽  
Manuel Dujovny

Abstract Intracranial vertebral endarterectomy was performed on six patients with vertebrobasilar insufficiency in whom medical therapy failed. The patients underwent operations for stenotic plaque in the intracranial vertebral artery with the opposite vertebral artery being occluded, hypoplastic, or severely stenosed. In four of the patients, the stenosis was mainly proximal to the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA). In this group, after endarterectomy, the vertebral artery was patent in two patients, and their symptoms resolved: in one patient the endarterectomy occluded, but the patient's symptoms improved; and in one patient the endarterectomy was unsuccessful, and he continued to have symptoms. In one patient, the plaque was at the origin of the PICA. The operation appeared technically to be successful, but the patient developed a cerebellar infarction and died. In one patient the stenosis was distal to the PICA. During endarterectomy, the plaque was found to invade the posterior wall of the vertebral artery. The vertebral artery was ligated, and the patient developed a Wallenburg syndrome. The results of superficial temporal artery to superior cerebellar artery anastomosis are better than those for intracranial vertebral endarterectomy for patients with symptomatic intracranial vertebral artery stenosis. The use of intracranial vertebral endarterectomy should be limited to patients who have disabling symptoms despite medical therapy, a focal lesion proximal to the PICA, and a patent posterior circulation collateral or bypass.


2012 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Míriam Eimil-Ortiz ◽  
InésPecharromándeLas Heras ◽  
CarlosLópez de Silanes de Miguel ◽  
Marta González-Salaices ◽  
MiguelA Sáiz-Sepúlveda

2018 ◽  
Vol 79 (S 05) ◽  
pp. S415-S417
Author(s):  
M. Kalani ◽  
William Couldwell

This video illustrates the case of a 52-year-old man with a history of multiple bleeds from a lateral midbrain cerebral cavernous malformation, who presented with sudden-onset headache, gait instability, and left-sided motor and sensory disturbances. This lesion was eccentric to the right side and was located in the dorsolateral brainstem. Therefore, the lesion was approached via a right-sided extreme lateral supracerebellar infratentorial (exSCIT) craniotomy with monitoring of the cranial nerves. This video demonstrates the utility of the exSCIT for resection of dorsolateral brainstem lesions and how this approach gives the surgeon ready access to the supracerebellar space, and cerebellopontine angle cistern. The lateral mesencephalic safe entry zone can be accessed from this approach; it is identified by the intersection of branches of the superior cerebellar artery and the fourth cranial nerve with the vein of the lateral mesencephalic sulcus. The technique of piecemeal resection of the lesion from the brainstem is presented. Careful patient selection and respect for normal anatomy are of paramount importance in obtaining excellent outcomes in operations within or adjacent to the brainstem.The link to the video can be found at: https://youtu.be/aIw-O2Ryleg.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document