Affiliations 

  • 1 Lim Su Lone, MRCSED. Sarawak General Hospital, Department of Neurosurgery, Jalan Tun Ahmad Zaidi Adruce, Kuching, Sarawak 93586, Malaysia.
  • 2 Albert Wong Sii Hieng, FRACS. Department of Neurosurgery, Sarawak General Hospital, Jalan Tun Ahmad Zaidi Adruce, Kuching, Sarawak 93586, Malaysia. wonghm96@yahoo.com
Med J Malaysia, 2013 Jun;68(3):253-8.
PMID: 23749017 MyJurnal

Abstract

This study reviews surgery on acoustic neuromas by the second author using retrosigmoid approach from January 2000 to June 2010 in the state of Sarawak. There was a total of 32 patients in this study. The commonest presenting symptom was hearing loss (81.3%), followed by headache and tinnitus (each 37.5%), ataxia (34.4%) and facial numbness (21.9%). Twenty-seven patients (84.4%) had large tumor (≥ 3cm) while 5 patients (15.6%) had medium size tumor (1.5-2.9cm). The mean tumor size was 3.6 cm. Facial nerve outcome was good to moderate in 93.7% (House and Brackmann Grade I-IV). The most common complications were CSF leak with 3 patients(9.4%) and facial numbness with 2 patients(6.3%). All either resolved with treatment or improved. There was no mortality. Excision of acoustic neuromas using retrosigmoid approach could achieve acceptable facial nerve outcome with a low incidence of morbidity without mortality.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.