ABSTRACT
Cerebrospinal fluid leaks of the temporal bone are rare, often occult, and sometimes
challenging to localize and repair. This is a retrospective study of eight patients
with spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leak and six patients with cerebrospinal fluid
leak or encephalocele discovered during chronic ear surgery who were treated in a
tertiary medical center over a 5-year period. All received preoperative temporal bone
computed tomography, and six also underwent magnetic resonance imaging, one computed
tomography cisternography, and one radionuclide cisternography. All patients initially
underwent a transmastoid surgical approach. Additional exposure was necessary in three
patients; two underwent middle fossa craniotomy and another required minicraniotomy.
Primary surgical repair was successful in six of the eight patients with spontaneous
leaks and in all six chronic ear patients. Both recurrences required intradural middle
fossa repair. An individualized approach should be taken for repair of temporal bone
cerebrospinal fluid leaks. In this series, most were successfully repaired in a single
stage using a transmastoid or combined approach. The transmastoid approach provides
information about the precise size and location of the dural defect. A primary transcranial
approach is needed for defects that are multiple, located in the petrous apex, and
in revision cases.
KEYWORDS
Cerebrospinal fluid leak - temporal bone - transmastoid approach - middle fossa craniotomy
- encephalocele
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Eric E SmouhaM.D.
The Mount Sinai Hospital, Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, One Gustave L. Levy
Place
Box 1189 New York New York 10029
Email: eric.smouha@mountsinai.org