Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery. / Alaoui-Ismaili, Adam; Krogager, M E; Jakola, A S; Poulsgaard, L; Couldwell, W; Mathiesen, T.

In: Neurosurgical Review, Vol. 44, 2021, p. 1675–1685.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Alaoui-Ismaili, A, Krogager, ME, Jakola, AS, Poulsgaard, L, Couldwell, W & Mathiesen, T 2021, 'Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery', Neurosurgical Review, vol. 44, pp. 1675–1685. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-020-01365-5

APA

Alaoui-Ismaili, A., Krogager, M. E., Jakola, A. S., Poulsgaard, L., Couldwell, W., & Mathiesen, T. (2021). Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery. Neurosurgical Review, 44, 1675–1685. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-020-01365-5

Vancouver

Alaoui-Ismaili A, Krogager ME, Jakola AS, Poulsgaard L, Couldwell W, Mathiesen T. Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery. Neurosurgical Review. 2021;44:1675–1685. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-020-01365-5

Author

Alaoui-Ismaili, Adam ; Krogager, M E ; Jakola, A S ; Poulsgaard, L ; Couldwell, W ; Mathiesen, T. / Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery. In: Neurosurgical Review. 2021 ; Vol. 44. pp. 1675–1685.

Bibtex

@article{e46a0a7e8c5b405c913c43d61fc8e744,
title = "Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery",
abstract = "The study aims to systematize neurosurgeons' practical knowledge of venous sacrifice as applied to the posterior fossa region and to analyze the collected data to present and preserve relevant experience and expert knowledge for current and future practicing neurosurgeons. The venous structures assessed were the superior petrosal vein (SPV), sigmoid sinus (SS), and the tentorial veins (TV). The survey is constructed to obtain surgeons' idea of assessed risk when sacrificing specific venous structures during posterior fossa surgery. They were asked how they prep for surgery, number of operations conducted, and their basis of knowledge. Collected data were mainly qualitative and analyzed with a mixed-method approach. A mean absolute deviation was calculated measuring rate of disagreement for a given substructure. Consensus existed among the participating surgeons that sacrificing the SPV and the TV was considered safe. Although, the risk of death when occluding major structures like the main trunk of the SPV, one of the SS' and or a total occlusion of all TV yielded high risk of death. The risk of infarction was often too apparent to discredit even with low risk of death among an experienced class of surgeons. Our findings provide an overview of surgical risk associated with venous sacrifice. This will minimize cases where indispensable practical knowledge on safe handling veins in the cerebellopontine angle is either to be lost or taught among few when the neurosurgeons retire. This will lower the disagreement regarding risks and increase the quality of surgical decision-making.",
author = "Adam Alaoui-Ismaili and Krogager, {M E} and Jakola, {A S} and L Poulsgaard and W Couldwell and T Mathiesen",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1007/s10143-020-01365-5",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
pages = "1675–1685",
journal = "Neurosurgical Review",
issn = "0344-5607",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Surgeons' experience of venous risk with CPA surgery

AU - Alaoui-Ismaili, Adam

AU - Krogager, M E

AU - Jakola, A S

AU - Poulsgaard, L

AU - Couldwell, W

AU - Mathiesen, T

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The study aims to systematize neurosurgeons' practical knowledge of venous sacrifice as applied to the posterior fossa region and to analyze the collected data to present and preserve relevant experience and expert knowledge for current and future practicing neurosurgeons. The venous structures assessed were the superior petrosal vein (SPV), sigmoid sinus (SS), and the tentorial veins (TV). The survey is constructed to obtain surgeons' idea of assessed risk when sacrificing specific venous structures during posterior fossa surgery. They were asked how they prep for surgery, number of operations conducted, and their basis of knowledge. Collected data were mainly qualitative and analyzed with a mixed-method approach. A mean absolute deviation was calculated measuring rate of disagreement for a given substructure. Consensus existed among the participating surgeons that sacrificing the SPV and the TV was considered safe. Although, the risk of death when occluding major structures like the main trunk of the SPV, one of the SS' and or a total occlusion of all TV yielded high risk of death. The risk of infarction was often too apparent to discredit even with low risk of death among an experienced class of surgeons. Our findings provide an overview of surgical risk associated with venous sacrifice. This will minimize cases where indispensable practical knowledge on safe handling veins in the cerebellopontine angle is either to be lost or taught among few when the neurosurgeons retire. This will lower the disagreement regarding risks and increase the quality of surgical decision-making.

AB - The study aims to systematize neurosurgeons' practical knowledge of venous sacrifice as applied to the posterior fossa region and to analyze the collected data to present and preserve relevant experience and expert knowledge for current and future practicing neurosurgeons. The venous structures assessed were the superior petrosal vein (SPV), sigmoid sinus (SS), and the tentorial veins (TV). The survey is constructed to obtain surgeons' idea of assessed risk when sacrificing specific venous structures during posterior fossa surgery. They were asked how they prep for surgery, number of operations conducted, and their basis of knowledge. Collected data were mainly qualitative and analyzed with a mixed-method approach. A mean absolute deviation was calculated measuring rate of disagreement for a given substructure. Consensus existed among the participating surgeons that sacrificing the SPV and the TV was considered safe. Although, the risk of death when occluding major structures like the main trunk of the SPV, one of the SS' and or a total occlusion of all TV yielded high risk of death. The risk of infarction was often too apparent to discredit even with low risk of death among an experienced class of surgeons. Our findings provide an overview of surgical risk associated with venous sacrifice. This will minimize cases where indispensable practical knowledge on safe handling veins in the cerebellopontine angle is either to be lost or taught among few when the neurosurgeons retire. This will lower the disagreement regarding risks and increase the quality of surgical decision-making.

U2 - 10.1007/s10143-020-01365-5

DO - 10.1007/s10143-020-01365-5

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32772296

VL - 44

SP - 1675

EP - 1685

JO - Neurosurgical Review

JF - Neurosurgical Review

SN - 0344-5607

ER -

ID: 246823440