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Groote Schuur surgeons use eye socket to reach the brain, writes

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because of her age and chronic conditions, would have been a high-risk patient to operate on using other techniques.

“In fact we tried to operate on her using the keyhole procedure that goes through the nose, but we had to stop the operation even before we started as she became very unstable while on the operating table,” she said.

It was after a few weeks of bouncing ideas around that the team of doctors came up with the idea of using the left eye socket to get to the right side of the bony defect.

“This turned out to be the best decision as it gave us a direct view and space to work on without the risk of damaging the surroundin­g nerves and blood vessels. Had we used other techniques such as going through the nose, we would have only been able to view it, but it would have been much harder to fix. We would have had to drill away the nerves and blood vessels to get a decent view,” Lubbe said.

According to the trio, the new technique not only allows surgeons direct access to the most intricate parts of the brain, such as brain tumours and other cranial defects, but it offers much quicker recovery time, leaves no visible scars on the patient, and makes it possible to operate on high-risk patients who otherwise would be deemed inoperable.

Until recently, doctors could only perform cranial surgery by either opening the skull – a procedure that is considered very invasive, or using a keyhole surgery that uses patients’ nostrils as an entry point.

The nose procedure is widely used in South Africa, but some of its drawbacks are that it can cause nerve damage and harm to the bone due to considerab­le drilling involved.

Lubbe said although the hospital pioneered Tones surgery two years ago, and had performed 40 such operations so far, it was the first time that doctors used an eye to reach the opposite side of the brain.

Following the resounding success of the latest surgery, the team would next month head to the US to share their experience and teach other doctors at the North American Skull-base meeting to be held in New Orleans.

Mustak said the Tones procedure was better in so many ways. Not only was it less complicate­d, but it allowed different specialist­s who often worked in a “fragmented” manner to work as a team.

“In medicine the more one becomes specialise­d the more fragmented the system becomes. There is a tendency among doctors to work on their own as they become specialise­d, but this negatively affects the patient who has to consult with different doctors over a long period.

“So the patient would have to get from one doctor to another without actually getting treatment.

Sample said: “Working as a team allowed us to sit down and think more, and now we have found the best approach that has made the operation more effective. Previously one specialist would do incomplete treatment and refer to other specialist­s for them to complete the job, but this resulted in a lot of inconvenie­nce for the patient.

“Now we are able to complete the treatment at once using a very sophistica­ted technique that would not leave a patient with complicati­ons such as epilepsy or damage to the eye, as is the case with traditiona­l techniques,” he said.

 ??  ?? A team of surgeons performed the first Transorbit­al neuroendos­copic surgery at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town.
A team of surgeons performed the first Transorbit­al neuroendos­copic surgery at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town.

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