Brain tumors can soon be removed without making a single incision by a revolutionary new form of surgery that is set to transform the field of medicine.
Brain tumors can soon be removed without making a single incision, by a revolutionary new form of surgery that is set to transform the field of medicine. Traditionally, such operations involved surgeons opening the skull - a procedure known as a craniotomy - and delving downwards.
Alternatively, parts of the brain were reached via large incisions in the side of the face or inside the mouth, all options that leave major scars.
But pioneering brain surgeons at Sheffield's Hallamshire Hospital have adopted a US-developed technique to reach deep-set tumors using an endoscope that is fed through the nose, reports the Daily Mail.
Surgeons now hope the success of this operation will pave the way for other types of brain tumor to be removed without making a single incision.
The tumor is reached by working through one nostril and making a hole in the back of the nasal cavity into the bottom of the skull. Through this hole, the surgeon can see the bottom of the pituitary gland and the tumor.
Cutting instruments, also mounted on flexible or telescopic arms, are used to remove the growth in pieces.
Advertisement
Source-ANI