Cervico-mediastinal schwannoma of the vagus nerve: resection with intraoperative nerve monitoring.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2011
abstract:
Schwannomas are usually benign, single,
encapsulated, slow-growing tumours originating from cranial
or spinal nerve sheaths. The vagus nerve involvement at
the mediastinal inlet is very uncommon. For anatomical
reasons, the resection of cervical and mediastinal schwannoma
of the vagus nerve has a high risk of vocal fold
paralysis. We describe the case of a 67-year-old female with
a cervico-mediastinal schwannoma of the vagus nerve that
we removed using the intraoperative neuromonitoring technique.
The patient presented with mild hoarseness and
complained of discomfort behind the jugular notch. Neck and
chest computerized tomography described a 35 9 30 mm
solid lesion behind the left clavi-sternal junction; preoperative
fine needle aspiration cytology revealed schwannoma.
Resection of the mass was performed with a cervical
approach and the vagus nerve tumour was completely
removed under continuous neuromonitoring (NIM-3
System), preserving the vagus and the recurrent laryngeal
nerve function. Pathology on the resected mass documented
A-type schwannoma with ‘‘ancient schwannoma’’ areas. The
intraoperative neurostimulation and neuromonitoring
approach for the resection of vagus schwannoma are recommended
because it may reduce the risk of injury to the
vagus and to the recurrent laryngeal nerve.
Iris type:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
List of contributors:
Imperatori, A; Dionigi, Gianlorenzo; De Monte, L; Conti, V; Rotolo, N.
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