Abstract
Surgical access to the middle fossa can be technically challenging. As neurosurgery
evolves to minimally invasive approaches, the objective of this study is to demonstrate
the extension of the Minipterional approach to access the middle fossa. We present
a new surgical approach to the middle fossa for the treatment of secondary trigeminal
neuralgia. Three cases are reported to illustrate the following techniques: a patient
with petrotentorial meningioma and trigeminal neuralgia, a patient with an arachnoid
cyst compressing the fifth nerve, and a patient with a middle cerebral artery aneurysm
and a long history of TN (trigeminal neuralgia) refractory to medical and surgical
treatments. All three experienced full symptom controls with no permanent neurological
deficits. Therefore, the Minipterional technique might represent a feasible, effective,
and safe option to treat refractory secondary TN. It also allows approaching these
lesions when the posterior fossa approach is compromised by anatomical distortion
and enables the simultaneous treatment of secondary trigeminal neuralgia and other
lesions, such as aneurysms and meningiomas.
Keywords
craniotomy - middle fossa - secondary trigeminal neuralgia - minipterional craniotomy