Patients
This retrospective study enrolled a consecutive series of 540 patients (47.5 ± 14.1 years, 273 female) undergoing a neurosurgical removal of a VS in the Neurosurgical Department of the University of Tuebingen between January 2011 and March 2017. Preoperatively, all patients received a semi-structured interview of VS-associated symptoms by an experienced neurosurgeon, a hearing evaluation by an ENT specialist (pure tone audiogram and speech discrimination), and measurement of auditory evoked potentials as well as a magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the brain. All surgeries were performed by the senior surgeon (MT) and another 3 surgeons trained by the first one. Consequently, all operations were carried out using the same technique. Patients’ characteristics are summarized in Table 1. The study was approved by the local ethics committee of the Eberhardt Karls University Tuebingen and performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.
Tumor size classification
In all patients, a preoperative magnetic resonance image (MRI) of the brain with gadolinium contrast was utilized and tumor extent was graded according to the Hannover classification [17]. VS were classified into 4 classes: T1 (purely intrameatal), T2 (intra- and extrameatal), T3a and T3b (filling the cerebellopontine cistern or touching the brain stem), T4a and T4b (compressing or shifting the brain stem).
Intraoperative positioning
Selection of the position was dependent on tumor size. The majority of patients with T1 and T2 tumors are operated in supine position whereas T3 and T4 tumors are operated in semi-sitting position.
Supine position
In the supine position, the head is fixed by means of a Mayfield skull clamp with the single pin at the forehead hairline laterally on the tumor side, and the double pin dorsally at the center line (i.e., using the inion as a landmark) or slightly contralateral. Subsequently, the head is rotated approximately 80° to the contralateral side and marginally tilted backwards. The shoulders end at the top of the operating table and, contrary to frequent textbook documentation, are not padded on the operating side.
Semi-sitting position
The semi-sitting position which has already been described elsewhere [17] was performed according to our protocol outlined by Tatagiba et al. [28]: The head is fixed by the Mayfield Clamp with the single pin on the ipsilateral side of lesion, ventrally to the tip of the ear. The body is positioned, such that the hip is flexed to a maximum of 90°, with the shoulders ending at the top of the operating table. To reduce the risk of air embolism, the legs are raised above the level of the heart (Fig. 1a). Afterwards, the head is fixed in an anteposition, 30–40° rotated to the ipsilateral side of the lesion and inclined with slight tilt towards the sternum. Finally, access to the jugular veins should be ensured to enable a jugular compression during surgery and to prevent venous outflow obstruction.
Surgical procedure
The principles of the surgical procedure were unchanged throughout all patients and correspond to the procedure as described elsewhere in detail [28]. After planning the incision, patients’ hairs were shaved locally followed by skin asepsis and sterile draping. Cutis, subcutis, superficial, and deep neck muscles are opened until the bone is visualized. Subsequently, emissary veins are coagulated and closed by bone wax to prevent air embolism. The area of the asterion is identified and the mastoid tip is exposed. Then, the craniotomy or craniectomy is performed followed by a partial mastoidectomy. The borders of the bony removal are defined laterally by the sigmoid sinus, superiorly by the transversal sinus, and inferiorly by the horizontal part of the posterior cranial fossa. The dura is incised in a semilunar fashion parallel to the sigmoid sinus. The inferior part of the cerebellum is gently elevated and the cerebellomedullary cistern (CMC) is exposed. The CMC is sharply opened to drain cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The posterior aspect of the petrous bone is exposed and certain amount of its dura is removed above the Tuebingen line [2] to expose the posterior wall of the internal auditory canal (IAC). Latter is drilled away and the intracanalicular tumor content is resected under identification of cranial nerves VII and VIII. Tumor extending into the CPA is debulked with ultrasonic aspirator, then cranial nerves VII and VIII are dissected stepwise from the tumor surface using a bimanual preparation technique. Finally, hemostasis is done, dura is closed, the bone flap or a cranioplasty is reinserted, and wound is closed.
Patients are usually extubated and monitored for 1 night on an intensive care unit (ICU) and receive a CT scan within 24 h after surgery. In cases with a delayed wake-up reaction (i.e., > 1 h after surgery), the CT scan is performed within a few hours after surgery. In cases with extensive pneumocephalus suggesting a tension pneumocephalus, air replacement is performed on ICU.
Air replacement procedure (twist-drill evacuation)
In cases of a tension pneumocephalus, after locally shaving the hair at the forehead hairline (usually on the right side) and skin asepsis, a stab incision and 5-mm drill hole is made. Afterwards, the dura is carefully punctured with two cannulas, where a frontal trajectory must be chosen to prevent injury to the brain. Subsequently, the air is replaced with Ringer solution by connecting one of the cannulas with a syringe filled with water. This method enables a pressureless and complete air replacement (Fig. 1b). After air replacement, the cannulas are removed and the wound is closed.
Voxel-based volumetry
A postoperative axial CT scan (resolution 3 mm, multi-slice CT scanner, Siemens Medical GmbH) was performed for each patient within 24 h after surgery to exclude any operative complication. Postoperative pneumocephalus is recognized as intracranial air-isodense voxel (Hounsfield value − 1000) mainly occurring in the prefrontal region (Mount Fuji sign, arrow) [18] and occasionally in the cisterns (air bubble sign, asterisk) [12] (Fig. 1c). VBV of postoperative supratentorial intracranial air volume was assessed by custom-made Matlab scripts (Version R2019a, MathWorks, Natick, MA, USA). The most challenging situation for automated detection was the discrimination between intracranial air and the frontal sinus. To overcome this, bone-weighted CT images were imported into the Matlab software, and all voxels with extracranial air were automatically removed based on their Hounsfield value (− 1000). Subsequently, manual removal of all slices below the frontal base was performed in order to avoid bias from the ethmoidal cells. Finally, the frontal sinus was denoted and removed manually (Fig. 1c).
Statistical analysis
All analyses and statistical tests were performed using MATLAB (MathWorks, Inc., Natick, MA, USA) and SPSS (IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 26.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.). Group differences between the supine and semi-sitting positions were evaluated by a non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test. In order to ascertain the effects of positioning (POS; 0: supine and 1: semi-sitting), gender (GENDER; 0: female and 1: male), age (AGE), tumor size (T1–T4), and surgery time (TIME) on the volume of postoperative pneumocephalus, a multivariate linear regression was performed (using a STEPWISE approach). Data are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (SD). p values < 0.05 were considered significant. Finally, operative complications detected in the postoperative CT scan were evaluated.