Archive | 2021
Utility of Intraoperative Ultrasound in Neurosurgery
Abstract
Objective\u2003The purpose of the present study is to demonstrate the usefulness of intraoperative ultrasound guidance as a technique for the assessment, in real time, of tumor resection and as a navigation aid during intra-axial brain lesion removal on patients admitted in the Neurosurgical Department at the Hospital Universitario de Caracas, Caracas, Venezuela, in 2018. Methods\u2003A total of 10 patients were enrolled, each with intra-axial brain lesions with no previous neurosurgical procedures and a mean age of 49 years old, ranging from 29 to 59 years old. Results\u2003A male predominance was observed with 7 cases (70%) over 3 female cases (30%). Six patients had lesions in the dominant hemisphere. The frontal lobe was the most commonly affected, with 5 cases, followed by the parietal lobe, with 4 cases. After craniotomy, ultrasound evaluation was performed previously to dural opening, during tumor resection and after tumor removal. The mean tumor size in axial, coronal and sagittal views was 3.72\u2009cm, 3.08\u2009cm and 3.00\u2009cm, respectively, previously to dural opening with intraoperative ultrasound. The average tumor depth was 1.73\u2009cm from the cerebral cortex. The location and removal duration from the beginning of the approach (ultrasound usage time) was 83.60\u2009minutes, and the average surgery duration was 201\u2009minutes. Navigation with intraoperative ultrasound served to resect intra-axial tumors more precisely and safely. There was no postoperative complication associated with the surgery in this series of cases. Conclusions\u2003Intraoperative ultrasound guidance for intra-axial subcortical tumor resection is a technique that serves as a surgical and anatomical orientation tool.