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  Vol. 123 No. 6, June 1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Neurilemomas of the Parapharyngeal Space

Ashraf Hamza, MD; Johannes J. Fagan, FCS(SA), MMed(Otol); Jane L. Weissman, MD; Eugene N. Myers, MD

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1997;123(6):622-626.


Abstract

Objective
To review the surgical management of neurilemomas of the parapharyngeal space (PPS).

Design
Retrospective survey of the clinical presentation, radiological features, surgical approaches, surgical findings, and postoperative neurological sequelae of neurilemomas of the PPS.

Setting
Academic tertiary care head and neck referral center.

Patients
Fourteen patients with neurilemomas of the PPS; 12 were in the poststyloid compartment.

Interventions
Preoperative evaluation with computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging with or without angiography. Surgical resection was performed through a transcervical approach.

Main Outcome Measures
Radiological features, adequacy of surgical approach, and neurological sequelae of surgery.

Results
Radiological studies could distinguish prestyloid from poststyloid tumors and, with poststyloid tumors, can usually differentiate between glomus tumor and neurilemoma. The transcervical approach permitted adequate surgical access. Five of the tumors in the poststyloid space were neurilomomas originating from the sympathetic nervous system, and all 5 patients with these tumors developed Horner syndrome postoperatively.

Conclusions
Computed tomographic and/or magnetic resonance studies should be routinely obtained to evaluate tumors of the PPS, but angiography is indicated only in selected cases. Both prestyloid and poststyloid neurilemomas can be resected through a transcervical approach. Resection of neurilemomas has an attendant risk for neurological dysfunction.

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1997;123:622-626



Author Affiliations

From the Department of Otolaryngology, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt (Dr Hamza); and the Departments of Otolaryngology (Drs Fagan and Myers) and Radiology and Otolaryngology (Dr Weissman), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pa.



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