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. 2000 Mar;109(3):255-7.
doi: 10.1177/000348940010900303.

Microsurgical anatomy of the perigeniculate ganglion area as seen from a translabyrinthine approach

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Microsurgical anatomy of the perigeniculate ganglion area as seen from a translabyrinthine approach

H K Lee et al. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 2000 Mar.

Abstract

Detailed anatomic knowledge of the microsurgical anatomy of the perigeniculate ganglion area is essential to probing adjacent to the facial nerve by a translabyrinthine approach. This study was designed to investigate the surgical anatomy of the perigeniculate ganglion area of the facial nerve from a translabyrinthine point of view. We dissected 15 human temporal bones under a microscope, measured the lengths of the tympanic segment and the labyrinthine segment by a middle cranial fossa approach, and measured the angle between the tympanic and labyrinthine segments by a translabyrinthine approach. The distance of the facial nerve from the cochleariform process to the geniculate ganglion was 3.8+/-0.7 mm. The length of the labyrinthine segment of the facial nerve was 4 +/-0.8 mm. The angle between the tympanic and labyrinthine segments from a translabyrinthine point of view was 26 degrees +/-5 degrees. Precise knowledge about the microsurgical anatomy of the perigeniculate ganglion area of the facial nerve from a translabyrinthine viewpoint is imperative for facial nerve decompression by a translabyrinthine approach.

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