학술논문

A CASE OF TRANSSPHENOIDAL MENINGOCELE WAS DIFFICULT TO DISTINGUISH FROM A SPHENOIDAL PYOCELE / 蝶形骨洞嚢胞との鑑別が困難であった経蝶形骨洞型髄膜瘤症例
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
耳鼻咽喉科展望 / JIBI INKOKA TEMBO. 2021, 64(1):25
Subject
cerebrospinal fluid leakage
meningitis
meningoencephalocele
sphenoidal pyocele
transsphenoidal meningocele
蝶形骨洞嚢胞
髄液漏
髄膜炎
髄膜脳瘤
Language
Japanese
ISSN
0386-9687
1883-6429
Abstract
Meningoencephalocele refers to herniation of the intracranial tissue, including the brain and/or meninges, through a defect in the skull base. Cranial meningoencephalocele is classified into occipital, frontal, ethmoidal, nasoorbital, and transsphenoidal types, according to the location of the defect. Transsphenoidal meningocele is rarely encountered. The patient was a 22-year-old man, with no previous history of nasal surgery or head trauma, who presented with a headache and underwent brain MRI. The MRI findings led to the suspicion of a sphenoidal pyocele. CT revealed a bone defect in the lateral wall of the sphenoidal sinus. We performed endoscopic sinus surgery to drain the pyocele and provide relief from the headache. However, after the operation, the patient developed high fever and developed a serous discharge from the sphenoid sinus. We corrected our diagnosis to transsphenoidal meningocele and performed reoperation. It was difficult to detect the point of the CSF leakage. We covered the defect in the sphenoid sinus with a fat graft obtained from the lower abdomen. A free mucus graft from the inferior turbinate was used to cover the fat graft. After 7 months, a brain MRI confirmed that the fat graft had not shrunk. Until the last follow-up at 3 years after the surgery, the patient had not developed any recurrence of the CSF leakage.