• 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
  • Meetings
    • 2026 Annual Meeting
    • Abstracts
      • 2026 Call for Abstracts
      • NASBS Poster Archives
      • 2025 Abstract Awards
    • 2026 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

2026 Poster Presentations

2026 Poster Presentations

 

← Back to Previous Page

 

P041: NOVEL VENOUS SINUS OF THE PORUS TRIGEMINUS OF MECKEL'S CAVE: ANATOMICAL AND RADIOLOGICAL STUDY
Erin McCormack-Ince, MD1; Amanda Watters1; Joseph Lockwood, MD1; Noritaka Komune2; Goetz Bonndorf3; Carmine Donofrio4; Filippo Badaloni5; Aaron Dumont, MD1; Joe Iwanaga1; R.Shane Tubbs, PhD1; 1Tulane University School of Medicine; 2Kyushu University; 3Baylor College of Medicine; 4ASST Cremona; 5IRCCS Istituto Delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna

Introduction: We present a novel sinus recently identified in the floor of the porus trigeminus of Meckel’s cave. This sinus is interposed between the superior and inferior petrosal sinuses, and due to its location, it can carry important surgical and clinical implications, as well as contribute to unusual presentations. A review of the current literature on similar variants in the region and the superior petrosal area is discussed, along with our cadaveric and radiological findings.

Methods: Twenty-five latex-injected cadavers (50 sides) underwent dissection of the skull base. Specifically, the dural venous sinus structures located at the porus trigeminus were evaluated using a surgical microscope. In addition, a retrospective review of imaging of this area was observed to identify a sinus at this location.

Results: For cadaveric specimens, the sinus of the porus trigeminus was seen on seven sides (14%) and this was compared to our histological and radiological findings. The sinuses always traveled in the floor of the porus trigeminus, were about 3 millimeter in width and variably connected to the superior petrosal sinus above but more often, with the inferior petrosal sinus or basilar venous plexus. One sinus drained directly into the cavernous sinus.

Conclusion: Surgery in and around the opening to Meckel’s cave could encounter the dural venous sinus of the porus trigeminus. Knowledge of such a variant will minimized operative and interventional complications.

View Poster

 

← Back to Previous Page

Copyright © 2026 North American Skull Base Society · Managed by BSC Management, Inc · All Rights Reserved