• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer

  • Twitter
  • YouTube
NASBS

NASBS

North American Skull Base Society

  • Home
  • About
    • Mission Statement
    • Bylaws
    • NASBS Board of Directors
    • Committees
      • Committee Interest Form
    • NASBS Policy
    • Donate Now to the NASBS
    • Contact Us
  • Industry
    • Exhibits and Support & Visibility Opportunities
    • Industry Archives
  • Meetings
    • 2026 Annual Meeting
    • Abstracts
      • 2026 Call for Abstracts
      • NASBS Poster Archives
      • 2025 Abstract Awards
    • 2025 Recap
    • NASBS Summer Course
    • Meetings Archive
    • Other Skull Base Surgery Educational Events
  • Resources
    • Member Survey Application
    • NASBS Travel Scholarship Program
    • Research Grants
    • Fellowship Registry
    • The Rhoton Collection
    • Webinars
      • Research Committee Workshop Series
      • ARS/AHNS/NASBS Sinonasal Webinar
      • Surgeon’s Log
      • Advancing Scholarship Series
      • Trials During Turnover: Webinar Series
    • NASBS iCare Pathway Resources
    • Billing & Coding White Paper
  • Membership
    • Join NASBS
    • Membership Directory
    • Multidisciplinary Teams of Distinction
    • NASBS Mentorship Program
  • Fellowship Match
    • NASBS Neurosurgery Skull Base Fellowship Match Programs
    • NASBS Neurosurgery Skull Base Fellowship Match Application
  • Journal
  • Login/Logout

2025 Proffered Presentations

2025 Proffered Presentations

 

← Back to Previous Page

 

V021: THE PRETEMPORAL TRASCAVERNOUS APPROACH FOR RESECTION OF SPHENOTENORAL MENINGIOMA
Mateus R Neto, Neurosurgeon1; Pedro Victor V De Freitas2; Igor Napoleao P De Araujo2; Jose M Rotta2; Matheus F Lourenço3; 1Beneficiencia Paulista, Iamspe E Instituto De Ciencias Neurologicas; 2IAMSPE; 3A.C.Camargo Cancer Center

The pretemporal transcavernous approach for sphenoclinoidal meningiomas involves accessing the tumor through a route that passes anterior to the temporal lobe and through the cavernous sinus. This technique allows for better visualization and control of the tumor, especially when it extends into the sphenoclinoidal region, facilitating safer and more effective resection while minimizing damage to surrounding neurovascular structures.

 

 

← Back to Previous Page

Copyright © 2025 North American Skull Base Society · Managed by BSC Management, Inc · All Rights Reserved