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Intraoperative Fluorescence With Second Window Indocyanine Green Enhances Visualization During Vestibular Schwannoma Surgery

Kevin A. Peng, Gregory P. Lekovic

2021Otology & Neurotology10 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the utility of the so-called "second window" of indocyanine green (ICG) as a near-infrared fluorescent dye for intraoperative visualization. PATIENTS: Three patients who underwent surgical resection of vestibular schwannoma (two retrosigmoid and one middle fossa approach). INTERVENTIONS: Patients underwent intravenous infusion of ICG at a mean dose of 4.8 mg/kg at a mean of 15.3 hours before surgical incision. Once tumor dissection began, near-infrared fluorescence was used alongside conventional operative microscopy to visualize tumor tissue. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Ability to distinguish tumor tissue from adjacent nerves. RESULTS: Intraoperative fluorescence allowed for enhanced visualization of the tumor-nerve plane in all patients. However, the effect varied among patients, and the effect faded with increasing surgical time. CONCLUSIONS: ICG, a well-tolerated cyanine dye, demonstrates late fluorescence hours after administration secondary to diffusion into tumor as well as normal tissues (the so-called "second window" of fluorescence). Its fluorescence in the near-infrared spectrum is a promising adjunct for enhancing visualization of tumor planes during vestibular schwannoma surgery.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSchwannomaVestibular systemIndocyanine greenRadiologyVisualizationWindow (computing)SurgeryCyanineRound windowNuclear medicineFluorescenceBiomedical engineeringMeningioma and schwannoma managementNeurofibromatosis and Schwannoma CasesVascular Malformations Diagnosis and Treatment
Intraoperative Fluorescence With Second Window Indocyanine Green Enhances Visualization During Vestibular Schwannoma Surgery | Litcius