First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas

Pfeiffer C, Riemann C, Kim R, Scholtz L-U, Schürmann M, Todt I (2024)
Journal of Clinical Medicine 13(11): 3300.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
Es wurden keine Dateien hochgeladen. Nur Publikationsnachweis!
Abstract / Bemerkung
Background: In most cases, intralabyrinthine schwannoma (ILS) occurs in patients with unilateral hearing deterioration or neurofibromatosis type II (NF II). The pattern of localization of these tumors varies but mostly affects the cochlea. Extirpation of the cochlear schwannoma, if hidden by the cochlea modiolus, is difficult under the aspect of complete removal. Therefore, a tissue removal device (TRD) was designed and tested in temporal bones. The principle of handling the new device is a pushing and pipe cleaner handling inside the cochlea. This present study aimed to describe the first in vivo experience with the newly developed TRD for removing cochlear intralabyrinthine schwannomas. Methods: In three patients, the TRD was used for the tumor removal of cochlear schwannomas. In two patients with a cochlear schwannoma in combination with a cochlea implantation and one patient suffering from NF II, a cochlear schwannoma was removed with the TRD. The access was performed with a posterior tympanotomy, an enlarged round window approach and an additional second turn access. The device was inserted and extracted gradually from the second turn access until the rings were visible in the second turn access. By pushing and pipe cleaner handling, the tumors were removed. An MRI control was performed on the day postoperatively with a T1 GAD sequence. Results: Tumor removal with the TRD was performed in a 15-min procedure without any complications. An MRI control confirmed complete removal on the postoperative day in all cases. Conclusions: In vivo handling of the device confirmed straightforward handling for the tumor removal. MRI scanning showed complete removal of the tumor by the TRD.
Stichworte
cochlear implant; intra-cochlear schwannoma; intralabyrinthine; schwannoma; tissue removal device
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Band
13
Ausgabe
11
Art.-Nr.
3300
eISSN
2077-0383
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2990757

Zitieren

Pfeiffer C, Riemann C, Kim R, Scholtz L-U, Schürmann M, Todt I. First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024;13(11): 3300.
Pfeiffer, C., Riemann, C., Kim, R., Scholtz, L. - U., Schürmann, M., & Todt, I. (2024). First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(11), 3300. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13113300
Pfeiffer, Christoph, Riemann, Conrad, Kim, Rayoung, Scholtz, Lars-Uwe, Schürmann, Matthias, and Todt, Ingo. 2024. “First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas”. Journal of Clinical Medicine 13 (11): 3300.
Pfeiffer, C., Riemann, C., Kim, R., Scholtz, L. - U., Schürmann, M., and Todt, I. (2024). First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas. Journal of Clinical Medicine 13:3300.
Pfeiffer, C., et al., 2024. First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(11): 3300.
C. Pfeiffer, et al., “First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas”, Journal of Clinical Medicine, vol. 13, 2024, : 3300.
Pfeiffer, C., Riemann, C., Kim, R., Scholtz, L.-U., Schürmann, M., Todt, I.: First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 13, : 3300 (2024).
Pfeiffer, Christoph, Riemann, Conrad, Kim, Rayoung, Scholtz, Lars-Uwe, Schürmann, Matthias, and Todt, Ingo. “First Clinical Experience with a New Device for the Removal of Cochlear Schwannomas”. Journal of Clinical Medicine 13.11 (2024): 3300.
Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 38893011
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar