For more information on our recent data notice, please click here

Menu
Search

Scarless Brain Surgery is New Option for Patients

 

September 24, 2010  |  

Surgeons at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine and University of Washington Medical Center have determined that transorbital neuroendoscopic surgery (TONES) is a safe and effective option for treating a variety of advanced brain diseases and traumatic injuries. This groundbreaking minimally invasive surgery is performed through the eye socket, thus eliminating the removal of the top of the skull to access the brain. These findings were published in the September issue of Neurosurgery.

“By performing surgery through the eye socket, we eliminate the need for a full craniotomy, gain equivalent or better access to the front of the  brain, and eliminate the large ear-to-ear scar associated with major brain surgery,” said Chris Bergeron, MD, assistant professor of Surgery, Division of Head and Neck Surgery, at UC San Diego Health System. “This novel technique is also critical to protecting neurovascular structures such as the optic and olfactory nerves.”

Chris Bergeron

Bergeron is a pioneer of scarless brain surgery at UC San Diego Health System.

To achieve access, the surgeons make a small incision behind or through the eyelid. A tiny hole is then made through the paper-thin bone of the eye socket to reach the brain. This pathway permits repairs to be made without lifting the brain. The TONES approaches also protect the optic nerves, the nerves for smell, as well as the carotid and ophthalmic arteries.

“This approach has opened a new field of brain surgery,” said study investigator, Kris Moe, MD, chief of the Division of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and professor of Otolaryngology at University of Washington Medical Center. “The advantages to this transorbital approach are many, including reduced pain and decreased recovery time for the patient.”

Transnasal surgery, a technique performed through the nose, offers similar access to some areas of the brain but means a more crowded operating environment for the surgeon than TONES. Moe, who pioneered the TONES in 2005, said the novel technique builds on the nasal approach but offers increased maneuverability and visibility for the surgical teams which usually require four sets of hands.

In a traditional craniotomy, a large portion of skull bone is removed. With TONES, the area of bone removed is only two to three centimeters. The operating time is much shorter since the skull does not need to be repaired and there is no need to close a large incision.

Patients underwent the TONES procedure to repair cerebral spinal fluid leaks, optic nerve decompression, repair of cranial base fractures and removal of tumors. Given further research, the surgeons believe that TONES may serve as a means to treat pituitary tumors, meningiomas, and vascular malformations. TONES is currently performed at two of the world's top medical institutions: UC San Diego Medical Center and the University of Washington Medical Center.

Researchers included Kris Moe, MD, Chris Bergeron, MD and Richard Ellenbogen, MD.

# # #

Media Contacts:  Jackie Carr (UCSD), 619-543-6163, jcarr@ucsd.edu
Susan Gregg-Hanson (UW), 206-616-6730, sghanson@u.wasington.edu




Media Contact

Share This Article


Related News

3/28/2023
New UC San Diego Health bladder cancer detection procedure uses blue light and imaging dye to make cancer cells glow pink in clinic and operating room settings.
3/27/2023
Researchers at UC San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health examined a new treatment approach for endometrial cancer.
3/22/2023
UC San Diego researchers describe why SARS-CoV-2 subvariants spread more rapidly than the original virus strain, and how an early treatment might have made people more susceptible to future infections ...
3/20/2023
UC San Diego Health expanding care to patients with a multidisciplinary clinic in Bankers Hill that will provide specialized care in a centralized location.



Follow Us