Interest
developed in the possibility of saving
hearing in patients with acoustic
neurinomas. In 1984, one group published the
results of a series of 22 patients in whom
an attempt was made to save hearing.
Subsequent publications have updated this
series. In 1988, Gardner and Robertson
reviewed the reports published in the
English literature from 1954 to 1986 on
hearing preservation following the removal
of an acoustic neuroma. However, in spite of
extensive clinical interest in this subject
and the use of intraoperative monitoring,
the results of hearing preservation have not
improved over the past two decades.
When
Can Useful Hearing Be Saved?
The chance
of saving useful hearing in the patient with
a unilateral acoustic neuroma and no
evidence of neurofibromatosis has a direct
relationship to the size of the tumor and
the preoperative level of hearing. In
reports of patients in whom it has been
possible to preserve some hearing, the tumor
has usually been less than 2 cm in diameter.
This would not be unexpected from the
observation that in larger tumors the
cochlear nerve usually merges into the
tumor. In one series of patients with
unilateral acoustic neurinomas, it was found
that when the tumor is intracanalicular or
extends up to 0.5 cm into the posterior
fossa, the chance of saving useful hearing
is 60 percent; and when it extends 0.5 to
1.5 cm, the chance is 35 percent. With
tumors that are 2.0 to 3.0 cm in diameter
there is a low probability of hearing
preservation, and when the tumor is 3,0 cm
or larger, only a few cases of preserved
hearing have been reported.
The second
criterion for preservation of useful hearing
is satisfactory preoperative hearing. Rarely
does the hearing improve from a non-useful
to a useful category. The definition of
useful hearing has been discussed by several
authors, with the most common criterion
being a speech reception threshold (SRT)
less than 50 dB with a speech discrimination
score (SDS) of 50 percent or more (50-50
rule). Although an SDS of 70 percent or
better has been proposed as a definition for
serviceable hearing, many patients benefit
from a lower level of hearing. Most of
patients fall under the 50-50 rule, but it
is better to use an SDS of 35 percent or
better to define useful hearing.
Etiology
of Hearing Loss during Tumor Removal
There are
several factors that may cause hearing loss
during the operation. These include
involvement of the cochlear nerve by the
tumor, interruption of the vascular supply
to the cochlea or nerve, injury to the
labyrinth. and extension of the tumor into
the cochlea.
When the
acoustic neuroma is intracanalicular or the
extension into the posterior fossa is 1,5 cm
or less, the cochlear nerve is usually found
on the tumor capsule as a separate bundle,
allowing the possibility of nerve
preservation. As the tumor enlarges, the
cochlear nerve tends to be incorporated into
the tumor so that in large tumors no more
than 10 percent have a cochlear nerve that
is on the tumor capsule. There is also
considerable variation in the adherence of
the nerve to the tumor and the amount of
dissection required to separate it.
The
ability to maintain the vascular supply to
the nerve and cochlea is one of the most
difficult problems in preserving hearing.
The location of the internal auditory artery
is variable, and there may be more than one
arterial vessel entering the internal
auditory meatus. When the artery is on the
anterior aspect of the nerve complex and
does not need to be dissected extensively,
the chances of saving hearing are better. In
an occasional patient, an artery within the
tumor or a small, apparently insignificant
vessel in the arachnoid going to the
internal auditory meatus area seems to be
the important blood supply for hearing.
Angiography is of no help in determining the
relationship of the internal auditory artery
to the tumor.
Injury to
the labyrinth can also cause hearing loss.
However, if this injury is not extensive, is
recognized, and is sealed with bone wax,
hearing may be preserved.
When the
tumor extends far laterally and invades the
cochlea, complete removal of the tumor
cannot be done without destroying hearing. A
gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) scan may allow a preoperative
diagnosis of such cochlear invasion.
Intraoperative
Monitoring:
Electrophysiologic monitoring of the facial
nerve is done during the operation and has
become an established procedure. This type
of monitoring assists the surgeon in the
identification and preservation of the
facial nerve. A click-evoked potentials
recorded by a needle electrode placed
through the inferior part of the tympanic
membrane on the cochlear promontory
(electrocochleography) and by electrodes in
the scalp (brain stem auditory evoked
potentials: BAEPs).
Electrocochleography (ECochG) records
near-field potentials and provides rapid
feedback of the compound action potential of
the auditory nerve probably generated near
the cochlea and cochlear microphonic
potentials, which are generated by the hair
cells of the inner ear. BAEPs are far-field
potentials that have a slower feedback. In
practice only wave V, which is generated
within the brain stem, is monitored because
the other potentials are much smaller and
often undetectable.
The
short-latency ECochG potentials are the most
useful for monitoring during operation
because they are generally not affected by
anaesthesia, they are almost always
detectable and they have immediate feedback.
On the other hand BAEPs, while useful, are
undetectable in some patients even when
there is useful hearing: in addition, it may
take up to a minute or more to obtain
satisfactory recordings because of the small
amplitude of the potentials.
By
monitoring both ECochG and BAEPs, the entire
portion of the auditory system at risk
during an acoustic neurinoma operation can
be monitored. The presence of N1 indicates
the integrity of the auditory nerve
peripheral to the tumor: wave V is an
indication of auditory nerve activity
central to the tumor: and the cochlear
microphonics indicate the status of the
cochlea, which is at risk from interruption
of blood supply or from damage to other
structures essential for cochlear function.
The
waveforms of the electrocochleogram is
stable and reproducible in most patients.
There is no problem with the eardrum. The
potential problems with the recording
include dislodgment of the electrode in the
ear, blood or fluid entering the middle ear
and blocking sound transmission (either from
the electrode trauma or from opening the
mastoid air cells), the inability to
recognize the cochlear microphonic waveforms
in some patients because of their small
amplitude, the possibility that direct
trauma to the cochlear nerve may not cause
immediate changes in the electrocochleogram
and the theoretical possibility that
potentials will be generated from a site
distal to the tumor.
When the
status of N1 and wave V at the end of the
operation are correlated with the hearing
outcome, it is found that if N1 and wave V
are lost there is no hearing. If wave V and
N1 were present, most patients have useful
hearing: if N1was present and wave V was
lost or never detected, the results were not
predictable. A fundamental limitation of the
monitoring is related to how the individual
nerve fibers react to the injury. They may
stop conducting completely, there may be too
few fibers left to generate a gross
potential that can be detected or they may
conduct a modified or desynchronized
impulse.
The hope
is that monitoring will give an indication
of early hearing compromise that is
reversible and will allow the surgeon to
alter the dissection. This is the case in
some patients in whom a change occurred that
recovered when the dissection was stopped or
altered. Monitoring has not made a definite
difference in the outcome when there has
been abrupt loss of function without warning
that does not recover, presumably due to
interruption of vascular supply: when
gradual loss of function occurs and when
there is no change in any waveform during
the operation. However, monitoring helps to
better understand the problems in preserving
hearing function.
Operative
Technique
Perioperative
Medication
Steroids
are usually started 48 h prior to surgery
and a higher dose (methylprednisolone 80 mg
IV) is given just before the operation. The
blood glucose level is monitored carefully.
The high steroid dose is continued every 6 h
during the operation and then is gradually
tapered over 5 to 10 days depending on the
size of the tumor and the degree of facial
nerve function.
After
anaesthesia is induced, an indwelling Foley
catheter is inserted and 10 to 20 mg of
furosemide is given intravenously. During
the preparation and the exposure of the
dura. a 20% solution of mannitol is given
intravenously in a dosage of 1 to 1.5 g/kg
over 20 to 30 min.
Selection
of Approach
Hearing
may be preserved with either a middle fossa
or suboccipital transmeatal approach to the
tumor. Usually the posterior fossa approach
is used because the middle fossa exposure
provides limited access to the posterior
fossa and is reported to be associated with
a higher incidence of facial weakness. The
middle fossa approach has been used when the
tumor is localized to the lateral end of the
internal auditory canal.
Patient
Positioning and Placement of Monitoring
Equipment
The
operating table is turned so the surgeon can
sit behind the head with his or her feet
under the table. The patient is placed in a
supine position with the ipsilateral
shoulder slightly elevated and the head
turned nearly parallel to the floor and
elevated and held with a skeletal fixation
headrest. An armrest is placed for the
surgeon's arm nearest the vertex of the
patient's head. The other arm rests on the
patient. In patients with an unrelated
condition involving the neck, it may be
necessary to elevate the shoulder more or
use a lateral position. During the operation
the line of sight to the brain stem may be
changed by moving the microscope and/or
rotating the operating table from side to
side and hence the position has been called
the supine-oblique position. Before
preparation and draping of the surgical
field, the equipment used for monitoring the
facial and cochlear nerves is placed.
Incision
and Exposure
A vertical
incision is centered approximately 1.0 cm
medial to the mastoid process. A graft of
pericranial tissue, 3 to 4 cm in diameter,
is taken from the occipital region and used
in closing the cerebellar convexity dura at
the conclusion of the operation.
Suboccipital muscles are incised in line
with the incision and are separated
carefully from their attachments to the
bone using sub-periosteal dissection and
electrocautery. The lateral two-thirds
of the suboccipital bone is exposed. A
burr hole is made, the dura separated
and a craniotomy flap cut.
Further bone is removed to expose the
transverse sinus, the turn of the
sigmoid sinus and the edge of the
petrous bone. If the mastoid air cells
are entered, they are occluded
immediately with bone wax. If fluid
enters these cells and gets into the
middle ear, there may be interference
with the intraoperative monitoring.
The
dura mater is opened vertically, with an
area of medial dura kept intact to
protect the retracted cerebellum.
Stellate dural incisions provide
superior, lateral and inferior flaps of
dura that are held back with sutures.
The cerebellum is then gently elevated,
the arachnoid is opened and
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is allowed to
drain. This will usually relieve any
bulging of the cerebellum and allows
exposure of the cerebellopontine angle
with minimal retraction. A catheter is
placed in the subarachnoid cistern to
allow CSF to continue to drain during
the operation.
Retraction of the cerebellum must be
done slowly and carefully because, on
occasion, this retraction has altered
the auditory evoked response. Changing
the direction or degree of retraction
usually causes the potentials to
recover. Any bridging veins from the
cerebellum to the dura are divided
carefully. The self-retaining retractors
are then placed. and the operating
microscope positioned.
Microsurgical
Removal of the Tumor
The
arachnoid over the posterior capsule of
the tumor is opened. The petrosal vein
is usually divided. The retractors are
repositioned. The eighth nerve complex
will usually be seen coming into the
inferior medial corner of the tumor. If
it is not immediately visible, the
cerebellar tissue next to the tumor may
be shrunk with bipolar coagulation to
expose the inferior medial aspect of the
tumor and the nerve complex.
When
an attempt is being made to save
hearing, the next step is usually
exposure of the tumor in the internal
auditory canal. The dura is removed over
the region of the internal auditory
canal and the bone is carefully removed
with an air drill, using constant
suction and irrigation for cooling.
Removal should extend for a distance of
no more than 10 mm, since more lateral
bone removal runs the risk of entering
the semicircular canals. Usually the
lateral end of the internal auditory
canal is not exposed. In the drilling of
the canal, it is necessary to pause at
frequent intervals to check the
potentials and to allow further cooling
and irrigation of the area.
The
surgeon has a choice of beginning the
dissection medially or laterally. The
preservation of hearing does not seem to
relate to whether the dissection is
carried along the nerve in a medial or
lateral direction. However, medial
traction on the cochlear nerve must be
avoided. An attempt is made to preserve
any arterial vessels going into the
auditory meatus.
Dissection then depends on an assessment
of the relationship of the tumor to the
vestibular and cochlear nerves. If
possible, it is better to begin the
dissection from medial to lateral. The
vestibular nerve fibers entering the
medial edge of the tumor are divided
using sharp dissection: the cochlear and
facial nerves are identified and the
dissection proceeds from medial to
lateral. In some patients it may be
difficult to define the cochlear nerve
medially. The tumor is then rotated
carefully near the lateral end of the
canal for identification of the seventh
nerve anterosuperiorly and the cochlear
nerve anteroinferiorly. It is important
to avoid stretching or putting tension
on these nerves. The position of the
seventh nerve is confirmed with
stimulation. An internal decompression
of the tumor may be done using sharp
dissection and bipolar coagulation to
facilitate the exposure. Dissection
along the facial and cochlear nerves is
done with fine straight or curved
microdissectors, canal knives and sharp
dissection with microscissors.
Dissection is alternated from different
directions, depending on what seems to
give the best exposure, the easiest
plane of dissection and the least
traction on the nerves. When the
cochlear and facial nerves have been
clearly defined. the vestibular nerves
coming into the tumor are divided on
both the medial and lateral aspects of
the tumor. In some patients the lateral
end of the tumor may not be completely
exposed because of the limitation in
bone removal, which often does not reach
the lateral end of the canal. In these
patients the tumor is transected near
the end of the canal and the lateral
extent of the tumor is removed with a
small angled ring curette.
During
the dissection there may be intermittent
bleeding along the nerves. A fine
regulated suction will keep the field
clean and will not damage the nerves.
Most of the bleeding will stop
spontaneously. As stated previously.
when the surgeon is trying to save
hearing, an attempt is made to preserve
any significant arterial vessel entering
the internal auditory meatus.
Closure
After
removal of the tumor, any mastoid air
cells that have been entered while
drilling to expose the internal auditory
canal are occluded with bone wax and an
adipose tissue or muscle graft is placed
in the area where the bone was removed.
After careful inspection of the
haemostasis, the dura is closed with the
graft of pericranial tissue, the bone
flap is replaced and an acrylic
cranioplasty is done if needed.
Long
term results
Gross
total removal of the tumor is achieved in
most patients in whom an attempt was made to
save hearing. Concern about recurrence
following removal of an acoustic neurinoma
with preservation of the cochlear nerve has
been discussed in the literature. Thedinger
et al. emphasize that inadequate exposure of
the lateral end of the internal auditory
canal may be associated with leaving a
remnant of tumor. Neely reported that in
patients in whom all of the tumor appeared
to have been removed, residual tumor was
found in the cochlear nerve, and he
concluded that "histologic data suggest that
complete tumor removal in attempts to
preserve hearing may be beyond our surgical
capabilities. However, Samii et al. reported
no recurrence in 16 patients who had removal
of intracanalicular acoustic neurinomas with
anatomic preservation of the cochlear and
facial nerves who had been followed 1 to 8
years. In one series an attempt to preserve
hearing was done in 119 patients with tumors
less than 2.0 cm in diameter. Follow-up
computed tomography (CT) and MRI have shown
no definite recurrence. A few patients have
an area of gadolinium enhancement in the
internal auditory canal on MRI. Whether this
represents residual tumor or postoperative
scar is unknown but follow-up scans have
shown no change.
The
long-term results of hearing preservation
have been evaluated. In the report of
Shelton et al., 14 (56 percent) of 25
patients who underwent removal of an
acoustic neurinoma by the middle fossa
approach suffered a significant loss of
hearing in the operated ear over a mean
follow-up of 8 years (range. 3 to 20 years).
On the other hand, Palva et al. reported a
significant loss in only 2 of 13 patients
during the first 4 years following
suboccipital removal. Rosenberg et al. did
not observe a significant decline in nine
patients followed for 1.3 to11 years.
McKenna et al., reporting a series of 18
patients with follow-up ranging from 3.4 to
10.4 years (mean. 5.4 years, found 4
patients (22%) with a significant decline in
hearing. Changes did not correlate with
tumor size, preoperative level of hearing,
intraoperative changes in hearing. the
interval between initial symptoms and
surgery, sex or age.
The
attempt to save hearing does not change the
ability to save facial nerve function. This
function also relates to tumor size, as it
does when no attempt is being made to save
hearing.
Management
of Tumor in the Only Hearing Ear
This
problem will occasionally be encountered in
patients with a unilateral tumor when the
opposite ear is deaf because of previous
infection or trauma. The following
guidelines for treatment of these patients
are suggested:
1. If
hearing is stable, the patient is followed
carefully with audiograms and MRI scans.
2. If the
tumor is under 1.5 cm and there is
progressive hearing loss, the chances of
hearing preservation based on the size of
the tumor, the patient's age and audiogram
findings are discussed with the patient and
a decision is made between total and
subtotal removal.
3. If the
tumor is over 1.5 cm and there is
progressive hearing loss, it is recommended
an internal auditory canal decompression and
subtotal removal of the tumor using
intraoperative monitoring.
Pensak et
al. reviewed this problem and reported two
patients in whom unilateral acoustic
neurinomas in the only hearing ear (1.0 cm
and 2.0 cm in size. respectively) were
treated with complete removal and retention
of usable hearing.