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Improved Understanding of Venous Drainage at the Cranio-cervical Junction : Study of Postoperative Venous Remodeling Following Surgical Treatment of Lesions of the Posterior Fossa or Posterior Approach of the Upper Cervical Spine.
Sponsor: University Hospital, Brest
Summary
In the literature, we most often find a dichotomous view of cerebral venous drainage. Thus, two drainage pathways are most often considered: the jugular vein network and the vertebral artery plexus. However, several clinical observations seem to indicate a much more complex situation. The following hypothesis is therefore put forward: there are alternative drainage pathways to these main pathways, which are physiologically present and capable of draining a significant volume of blood. A set of alternative pathways, which can be described as "deep," has been described: in particular, drainage pathways surrounding the vertebral artery (vertebral artery venous plexus), epidural plexuses, and deep cervical veins. However, the so-called "superficial" systems (subcutaneous and muscular) do not appear to have been studied. There appears to be a change in venous drainage of the craniocervical junction postoperatively (posterior cranial fossa surgery and posterior approach to the upper cervical spine). These modifications would vary depending on the venous drainage configuration present in each patient. If this hypothesis is confirmed, it could have an impact on the management of each patient. Thus, if venous remodeling models are established, this could enable personalized perioperative patient management: better optimization of body position during installation in the operating room, more effective anticipation of potential intraoperative venous bleeding, and explanation of persistent headaches in the postoperative period due to insufficient compensation of venous drainage. Confirmation of this hypothesis would also improve our understanding of certain pathologies for which the venous hypothesis has been raised (chronic hydrocephalus in adults, idiopathic intracranial hypertension, etc.).
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2025-11-03
Completion Date
2027-03
Last Updated
2025-10-03
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
T1 GRE GADO MRI sequence
Addition of a T1 gradient echo sequence with gadolinium (T1 TFE GADO) during the two MRI scans performed in routine practice before and after neurosurgery.
Locations (1)
CHU Brest
Brest, Brittany Region, France