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[Skull base meningiomas spreading into the infratemporal fossa: clinical picture, diagnosis, and treatment policy].

From 1997 to 2004, the Academician N. N. Burdenko Research Institute of Neurosurgery has operated on 54 patients with intracranial meningiomas spreading into the infratemporal fossa. Fifteen patients were operated on for the first time. Thirty-nine patients had undergone surgical interventions on the average 3 times (from 2 to 8). All the patients were operated on via different orbitozygomatic approaches depending on the extent of the process. Opening the upper and lower palpebral fissures and the round foramen with resection, if required, the pterygoid processes suffice to remove tumors from the areas of the upper and lower palpebral fissures, which spread into the sphenoid and maxillary sinuses. If there are tumors at the site of the base of the anterior surface of the pyramid, and the articular bursa, it is expedient to open the oval and spinous foramens, to resect the external portions of the fundus of the middle cranial fossa and, if required, the articular process of the lower jaw. By taking into account the X-ray and histological patterns, it may be stated that invasion of meningiomas is not always accompanied by the development of hyperostosis. According to our findings, extracranial growth of meningiomas points to the invasion of osseous structures of the middle cranial fossa. Furthermore, if meningiomas grow into the infratemporal fossa, they frequently involve the muscles, nerves, and mucosa. After removing the tumors spreading to the infratemporal fossa, the optimum plastic repairs of defects of the base of the skull are as follows: hermetic closure of basal defect of the dura mater with a free fat flap, by fixing it with sutures and fibrin-thrombin glue with additional plastic repair of skull base defect with local displaced tissues on a pedicle (with a temporal muscular fascioperiosteal flap, a Bisch fat flap). Further policy of management of these patients is a complicated problem. It depends on the radicalism of an operation and the invasiveness of the process. The histobiological features of infiltrative meningiomas should be studied and this will determine management policy. Conceivably, the use of postoperative radiation therapy will be substantiated in a definite group of patients.

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