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Featured researches published by Alaa Montaser.


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Erratum: Endoscopic Endonasal Transtuberculum Sellae Approach for the Resection of Suprasellar Epidermoid Cyst

Alaa Montaser; Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Mostafa Shahein; Alexandre B. Todeschini; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1624590.].


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Endoscopic Endonasal Resection of Tuberculum Sellae Meningioma with Utilization of Indocyanine Green

Mostafa Shahein; Alaa Montaser; Alexandre B. Todeschini; Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

We present the case of a 67-year-old female with an incidental finding of a left-sided tuberculum sellae meningioma on a brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for an unrelated complaint. Formal visual field testing showed a small defect in the inferior nasal and temporal fields of the left eye, compatible with mass effect on the optic nerve by the tumor. An endoscopic endonasal transtuberculum approach with decompression of the left optic nerve was performed using a standard binostril four-hand technique, with the patient positioned supine with the head turned to the right side and tilted to the left, fixed in a three-pin head clamp, under imaging guidance. After exposure, we drilled the tuberculum sellae and the floor of the sella and after opening the dura, the tumor and optic nerve came into view. The tumor was completely removed and we confirmed the patency of all perforating vessels using indocyanine green. Reconstruction was done in a multilayered fashion, using collagen matrix and a nasoseptal flap. Patient had an uneventful postoperative stay and was discharged on postoperative day 3, neurologically stable with no new hormonal deficits. Pathology report confirmed a WHO Grade I meningioma with K i -67 of 1% and 3-month postoperative MRI confirmed a gross total resection and visual fields exam showed a complete recovery. The link to the video can be found at: https://youtu.be/zRmt2aIvX5c .


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Endoscopic Endonasal Approach to a Suprasellar Craniopharyngioma

Alexandre B. Todeschini; Alaa Montaser; Mostafa Shahein; Juan Manuel Revuelta; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

We present the case of a 57-year-old male who presented with progressive right side vision loss whose workup revealed a large suprasellar lesion with invasion of the third ventricle. The pituitary stalk was not visible. Hormonal panel showed no hormonal deficits. The initial diagnosis was of a type II transinfundibular craniopharyngioma (as classified by Kassam et al). An endoscopic endonasal transplanum transtuberculum approach was done using a standard binostril four-hand technique, with the patient positioned supine with the head turned to the right side and tilted to the left, fixed in a three-pin head clamp, under imaging guidance. The tumor was carefully dissected away from the optic apparatus while preserving the vessels, mainly the superior hypophyseal artery. The stalk was identified around the tumor and preserved. The third ventricle was entered and inspected at the end of the procedure and a near-total resection (a small residual in the right hypothalamus) with decompression of the optic apparatus was achieved. Reconstruction was done in a multilayered fashion, using collagen matrix and a nasoseptal flap. Patient had an uneventful postoperative stay and was discharged on POD 4, neurologically stable with no hormonal deficits. Pathology confirmed an adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma. Due to a small growth of the residual, patient underwent fractionated stereotactic radiation (50.4Gy in 28 sessions). He presented with panhypopituitarism 2 years after radiation therapy. At 3-month follow-up, his vision was back to normal and 6-year postoperative magnetic resonance imaging showed no signs of recurrence. The link to the video can be found at: https://youtu.be/chG7XIz7a_A .


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Endoscopic Endonasal Transplanum–Transtuberculum Sellae Approach for the Resection of a Diaphragma Sellae Meningioma

Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Alaa Montaser; Alexandre B. Todeschini; Mostafa Shahein; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

The endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) provides a direct access to diaphragma sellae meningiomas. We present a case of a 56-year-old-female with an incidentally diagnosed sellar/suprasellar lesion with no hormonal deficit; thus, she opted for conservative management initially. During her annual follow-up appointment with her ophthalmologist, it was noticed that the patient had right eye peripheral deficit on formal visual field testing. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an enlargement of the sellar/suprasellar mass, causing displacement of the optic chiasm. A transplanum–transtuberculum EEA was performed. Gross-total removal was achieved and closure was done in a multilayer fashion using a collagen matrix, nasoseptal flap. Histopathological examination confirmed a meningioma WHO grade I. There were no intra- or postoperative complications. At 4-year-follow-up, the patient has stable vision and MRI brain showed no recurrence. The link to the video can be found at: https://youtu.be/xY8T9hotlDs .


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Endoscopic Endonasal Resection of a Suprasellar Pituitary Adenoma Mimicking Tuberculum Sellae Meningioma in a Patient with an Intrasellar Persistent Trigeminal Artery

Alaa Montaser; Alexandre B. Todeschini; Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Mostafa Shahein; E. Antonio Chiocca; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

A 50-year-old female with an incidentally diagnosed suprasellar lesion was initially managed conservatively due to the presence of an intrasellar persistent trigeminal artery going through the dorsum sellae and fundamentally forming the blood supply of the entire posterior circulation. Serial follow-up brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed progressive enlargement of the suprasellar lesion over 4 years period. Surgery was indicated after the initial tumor growth; however, the patient refused surgery for fear of complications related to the persistent trigeminal artery. Two-and-a-half years later, she presented with deterioration of vision. Formal visual field testing revealed a right temporal field defect. Brain MRI demonstrated significantly enlarged suprasellar lesion, most consistent with tuberculum sellae meningioma, exerting mass effect on the optic apparatus. The patient underwent endoscopic endonasal resection of the lesion through a transplanum/transtuberculum approach. Intraoperatively, absence of hypertrophic McConnel arteries, hyperostosis, and the fact that the dura was soft and not under tension was against the diagnosis of tuberculum sellae meningioma. Additionally, the tumor consistency was similar to a pituitary adenoma. A complete resection was accomplished and multilayer skull base reconstruction was performed with no complications. On postoperative day 1 (POD 1), she was operated upon for the evacuation of small suprasellar hematoma associated with vision deterioration. Histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of atypical pituitary adenoma with K i -67 labeling index of 4 to 5%. The patient ultimately recovered well with improved vision, and was discharged on POD 4 with no new neurological deficits. At 4 years follow-up, her vision was normalized and brain MRI showed no residual or recurrent lesion. The link to the video can be found at: https://youtu.be/QZmzctjAEbw .


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Endoscopic Endonasal Transtuberculum Sellae Approach for the Resection of Suprasellar Intrainfundibular Epidermoid Cyst

Alaa Montaser; Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Mostafa Shahein; Alexandre B. Todeschini; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

A 49-year-old female presented with intense headaches of 3 months duration. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed and showed a sellar–suprasellar lesion extending into the third ventricle. A presumptive diagnosis of a craniopharyngioma was made. Since the patient did not have any visual deficits, she opted for conservative management. Four months later, she started to have progressive deterioration of vision; thus, surgery was indicated. The patient underwent endoscopic endonasal resection of the lesion through a transtuberculum sellae approach. The patient was positioned supine with the head slightly extended and the face turned to the right side. Following the essence of a binostril four-hand technique, a total gross resection of the lesion was achieved and multilayer skull base reconstruction was performed utilizing collagen matrix and nasoseptal flap; with no intraoperative complications. The patients postoperative course was uneventful with the improvement in her vision, and she was discharged on postoperative day 4 with no new neurological deficits. Histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of an epidermoid cyst. Postoperative pituitary gland function was within normal limits except for mild diabetes insipidus for which she is on DDAVP 0.1 mg twice daily. At 4 years follow-up, the patient was doing well, her vision was normalized, and brain MRI revealed no evidence of residual or recurrent lesion. The link to the video can be found at: https://youtu.be/OqDFpa_Xq78 .


Operative Neurosurgery | 2018

Endoscopic Endonasal Focal Transclival-Medial Condylectomy Approach for Resection of a Foramen Magnum Meningioma: 2-Dimensional Operative Video

Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Alaa Montaser; Mostafa Shahein; André Beer-Furlan; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

The endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) provides direct access to foramen magnum meningiomas; however, it often requires extensive exposure including septal flap elevation with septum removal, complete sphenoidotomy, and panclivectomy.We present a case of a 54-yr-old-female with an incidental foramen magnum lesion followed up with serial imaging who presented 10 mo later with progressive neck discomfort and episodes of dizziness, with confirmed tumor progression and further brainstem compression. A focal transclival EEA with medial condylectomy was performed preserving the upper two-thirds of the clivus, the nasal septum, and the sphenoid sinus. Gross total removal of a meningioma WHO Grade-1 was achieved with dura resection on the majority of the tumor (Simpson 2). Closure was achieved with a random pedicled inverted V nasaopharyngeal flap. There were no complications, all symptoms improved, and no recurrence was seen in 12 mo of follow-up.IRB approval was neither required nor saught for this single case report. The patient gave informed consent.


Operative Neurosurgery | 2018

Giant Olfactory Groove Meningioma—2-Staged Approach: 2-Dimensional Operative Video

Alexandre B. Todeschini; Mostafa Shahein; Alaa Montaser; Douglas Hardesty; Bradley A. Otto; Ricardo L. Carrau; Daniel M. Prevedello

A 42-yr-old female presented with an olfactory groove meningioma causing progressive vision loss and anosmia. Given the size of the tumor, we opted for a 2-stage surgery: endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) followed by a craniotomy. Stage I surgery was a transcribriform transplanum EEA using a binostril 4-hand/2 surgeons (ENT and neuro) technique, with the patient positioned supine with the head slightly turned to the right side and tilted to the left, fixed in a 3-pin head clamp, under imaging guidance, in which we drilled out all the affected skull base bone, devascularized and debulked the tumor. Stage II surgery was done through a right frontotemporal craniotomy 2 mo later. The surgery and postoperative period was uneventful with no complications and no need for further reconstruction of the skull base. The patients vision was normalized. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) confirmed a Simpson Grade 1 resection. The rationale behind this staged approach is that we have found when using a transcranial 1-stage approach the brain edema and necessary retraction required for resection leads to brain injury, oftentimes readily identified in the diffusion-weighted imaging MRI which are associated with different degrees of cognitive impairment. The skull base bone involved is usually not removed via transcranial approaches. Despite requiring a second surgery, this staged approach allows a true total resection (including the affected bone) and in the transcranial stage the brain is more relaxed, with less edema, reducing the need for retraction, which may lead to a better outcome. The patient has given assent and written consent for videos, images, or clinical or genetic information to be published.


Laryngoscope | 2018

Endonasal anatomy of the olfactory neural network: Surgical implications: Endonasal Anatomy of the Olfactory Network

Matias Gomez Galarce; Juan C. Yanez-Siller; Ricardo L. Carrau; Alaa Montaser; Lucas Lima; Diego Servian; Bradley A. Otto; Daniel M. Prevedello; Cristian Naudy

Define the anatomic distribution of the olfactory filaments within specific mucosal regions of the nasal cavity.


Skull Base Surgery | 2018

Minimally Invasive Approaches for Optic Nerve Decompression: Comparison between EEA and Endoscopic-Assisted Transorbital Transconjunctival Approach

Mostafa Shahein; Juan M. Revuelta Barbero; Alaa Montaser; Bradley A. Otto; Carrau Ricardo; Daniel M. Prevedello

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