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Postoperative intracerebral haematomas following stereotactic biopsies: Poor planning or poor execution?

Marc Zanello, Alexandre Roux, Clément Debacker, Sophie Peeters, Myriam Edjlali, F. Dhermain, Edouard Dezamis, Catherine Oppenheim, Emmanuèle Lechapt, Marc Harislur, Pascale Varlet, Fabrice Chrétien, Bertrand Devaux, Johan Pallud

Year
2020
Citations
17

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Postoperative intracerebral haematomas represent a serious complication following stereotactic biopsy. We investigated the possible underlying causes - poor planning or poor execution - of postoperative intracerebral haematomas following stereotactic biopsies. METHODS: We performed a technical investigation using a retrospective single-centre consecutive series of robot-assisted stereotactic biopsies for a supratentorial diffuse glioma in adults. Each actual biopsy trajectory was reviewed to search for a conflict with an anatomical structure at risk. RESULTS: From 379 patients, 12 (3.2%) presented with a postoperative intracerebral haematoma ≥20 mm on postoperative CT-scan (3 requiring surgical evacuation); 11 of them had available intraoperative imaging (bi-planar stereoscopic teleangiography x-rays at each biopsy site). The actual biopsy trajectory was similar to the planned biopsy trajectory in these 11 cases. In 72.7% (8/11) of these cases, the actual biopsy trajectory was found to contact a structure at risk (blood vessel and cerebral sulcus) and identified as the intracerebral haematoma origin. CONCLUSIONS: Robot-assisted stereotactic biopsy is an accurate procedure. Postoperative intracerebral haematomas mainly derive from human-related errors during trajectory planning.

Keywords

MedicineStereotactic biopsyBiopsyIntracerebral hemorrhageBrain biopsyRadiologySurgeryHematomaStereotactic surgeryGlasgow Coma Scale

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