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Frontotemporal craniotomy with skin incision along the superior temporal line outside the hairline in bald male patients with temporal gliomas.

Neurosurgical Review 2023 November 11
A head skin incision is inevitable in neurosurgical procedures and is usually concealed within the hairline. Androgenetic alopecia (AGA) is a progressive hair loss disorder or baldness highly prevalent in men. Therefore, if bald male patients require neurosurgical procedures, skin incisions cannot be concealed, but this subject is yet to be discussed in the literature. This study presents a frontotemporal craniotomy using a skin incision along the superior temporal line, ignoring the hairline in bald male patients. Thirty-three patients with temporal gliomas underwent surgical removal between 2015 and 2022. They were divided into three groups: bald male patients with skin incisions not concealed in the hairline (minimum group, n = 13), bald and non-bald male patients with skin incisions concealed in the hairline (male group, n = 11), and female patients with skin incisions concealed in the hairline (female group, n = 9). In the minimum group, patients had no complaints regarding the incision scar. Cosmetic outcome was excellent, and no cases showed surgical site infection or peripheral facial nerve palsy. Compared with the male and female groups, the minimum group had the shortest skin incision length; however, the craniotomy size and extent of resection were similar. Skin incision for frontotemporal craniotomy cannot be hidden in bald male patients, and the preferred location for the incision is unknown. The skin incision along the superior temporal line is a cosmetically favorable, feasible, and safe procedure.

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