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"Mazda Farshad"

Original Article

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Intra-, Epidural And Intracranial Pressure Changes During Interlaminar Endoscopy, With and Without Dural Tear
Neurospine. 2025;22(2):583-591.   Published online June 30, 2025
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Intra-, Epidural And Intracranial Pressure Changes During Interlaminar Endoscopy, With and Without Dural Tear
Neurospine. 2025;22(2):583-591.   Published online June 30, 2025
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Objective
Endoscopic spine surgery implies possibly severe complications of the central nervous system, from headache to seizures and autonomic dysreflexia. These adverse events might be due to increased intracranial pressure (ICP), presumably induced by increased spinal intra-/epidural pressure caused by fluid irrigation. This study was designed to perform interlaminar endoscopic lumbar discectomy (IELD) at different irrigation fluid settings while monitoring its effect on intra-/epidural and ICPs, with and without dural tears.
Methods
Spinal intradural pressures were measured by introducing catheters through a sacral approach to human cadavers’ lumbar, thoracic, and cervical levels. Additionally, an epidural probe was placed at L3–4. ICP was measured by an intraventricular probe. IELD was performed at L3–4, and the effect of varying irrigation pressures by different endoscopic pump systems and gravity-based irrigation on intra-/epidural and ICP pressures was measured before and after durotomy at L3–4.
Results
Intradural pressure at L3–4 correlated linearly with increasing irrigation pressure, irrespective of the used pump system (median pressure increase at 100-mmHg irrigation pressure: system I: 7 mmHg, r=0.94, p=0.002; system II: 7 mmHg, r=0.89, p=0.017) or gravity (8 mmHg, r=0.93, p=0.242). This effect was also seen intradurally at the thoracic/cervical spine, epidural, and intracranial level, and was even more pronounced with the maneuver of outflow-occlusion and a dural tear present.
Conclusion
While performing IELD, pump pressures correlated linearly to intra-/epidural pressures and ICPs. Pressures did not rise to concerningly high levels without outflow-occlusion, even with increased pump pressures. In the presence of a dural tear, higher pump pressures exacerbated by occlusion may lead to deleterious intradural and ICP elevations.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Preliminary Report of Full-Endoscopic Spinal Dural Repair Using Double-Arm Sutures With a Biportal Endoscopic System: Technical Note and Feasibility Evaluation in an Ex Vivo Porcine Model
    Kuo-Hua Chao, Chiu-Ming Chen, Jui-Jung Yang
    Operative Neurosurgery.2026; 31(1): 144.     CrossRef
  • Biportal endoscopic foraminotomy of the L7–S1 neuroforamen in dogs: Description of surgical technique and ex vivo comparison with conventional open dorsolateral foraminotomy
    Dimitrios Bekiaridis, Antonio Pozzi, Frank Steffen, Julian Guevar, Lucas A. Smolders
    Veterinary Surgery.2026; 55(4): 837.     CrossRef
  • A Protocol to Preserve the Dural Safety Margin During Simultaneous Hybrid Lumbar Unilateral Biportal Endoscopy and Cervical Laminoplasty
    Karson Tam, H.Y. Li, H.K. Lo, W.L. Kam
    World Neurosurgery.2026; 209: 124877.     CrossRef
  • Epidemiology of spinal cord hypertension syndrome in water-mediated uniportal full endoscopic thoracolumbar surgery: a single-center experience
    Haiyang Wu, Luyang Wang, Yiping Zheng, Xizhong Zhu, Wanqi Ren, Ziheng Li, Shoule Ma, Mingwang Zhao, Xingchen Li, Yusheng Xu
    European Spine Journal.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Validation of the VIEW score: a novel intraoperative grading scale for visualization in endoscopic spine surgery
    Vit Kotheeranurak, Surachat Jaroenwareekul, Jin-Sung Kim, Christoph Siepe, Don Young Park, Javier Quillo-Olvera, Worawat Limthongkul, Wicharn Yingsakmongkol, Weerasak Singhatanadgige
    European Spine Journal.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • ADAMKIEWICZ’S ARTERY IN ENDOSCOPIC SURGERY: NARRATIVE REVIEW
    Ricardo Rezende Campos, Charbel Jacob Junior, Marcelo Botelho Soares de Brito, Jorge Felipe Ramírez León2, Gabriel Oswaldo Alonso Cuéllar, Sonja Ellen Lobo, João Paulo Machado Bergamaschi
    Coluna/Columna.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • 6,059 View
  • 161 Download
  • 4 Web of Science
  • 6 Crossref

Video Articles

Video Articles: Special Issue With JMISST

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Endoscopic Transforaminal Thoracic Decompression for Removal of a Giant Calcified Thoracic Disc Herniation
Neurospine. 2024;21(4):1116-1118.   Published online December 31, 2024
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Endoscopic Transforaminal Thoracic Decompression for Removal of a Giant Calcified Thoracic Disc Herniation
Neurospine. 2024;21(4):1116-1118.   Published online December 31, 2024
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To demonstrate the preoperative workup, surgical planning and execution of transforaminal endoscopic thoracic discectomy (TETD) for a giant calcified disc herniation. Surgeries for symptomatic thoracic disc herniations are rare and challenging. The main goal is to achieve sufficient decompression with minimal manipulation of the spinal cord. Conventional surgical techniques may have significant approach-related morbidities and often require additional stabilization. The full endoscopic transforaminal technique is the least invasive approach so far. A 73-year-old female patient with progressive gait disturbance and paraparesis received radiological imaging which revealed a giant calcified thoracic disc herniation at the level T11–12. The preoperative workup, planning and execution of TETD is demonstrated in detail. This report represents a typical educational case of a giant calcified thoracic disc herniation, treated by TETD.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Treatment of Calcified Thoracic Disc Herniation by Percutaneous Spinal Endoscopy with Culvert Decompression
    Donglun Xiao, Yuefei Li, Ning Sun, Xin Liu, Rui Li, Tianwei Sun
    World Neurosurgery.2026; 206: 124763.     CrossRef
  • Anesthetic complications of extensive spinal nerve block and total spinal anesthesia during percutaneous endoscopic spinal surgery under local anesthesia
    Bao-Shan Xu, Shuai-Shuai Wei, Wen-Yi Li, Qiang Yang, Kai-Hui Zhang, Bing-Gang Guan, Chao Chen, Hai-Wei Xu, Ning Li, Li-Long Du, Tong-Xing Zhang, Jia-Wen Guan, Jia-Guo Zhao, Yue Zhou, Dong Ming
    European Spine Journal.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • 3,617 View
  • 102 Download
  • 2 Web of Science
  • 2 Crossref

Video Articles: Special Issue With JMISST

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Endoscopic Contralateral Transaxillary Discectomy for Recurrent Disc Herniation
Neurospine. 2024;21(4):1154-1159.   Published online December 31, 2024
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Endoscopic Contralateral Transaxillary Discectomy for Recurrent Disc Herniation
Neurospine. 2024;21(4):1154-1159.   Published online December 31, 2024
Close
This video aims to describe an endoscopic surgical approach for accessing difficult to reach pathology such as disc herniations after previous surgery. The relatively small size of endoscopic instruments facilitates significant freedom of movement inside the spinal canal. The authors have experience with interlaminar approaches for contralateral pathology such as disc herniations, recurrent disc herniations, spinal stenosis, and facet cysts. The advantages of starting from the opposite side of the canal in a revision situation include the ability to establish a clear plane between the dura and the borders of the canal and visualize the disc from a different angle than the index operation. Contralateral approaches to residual or recurrent herniations can be performed with an “over the top” technique, navigating dorsal to the thecal sac to reach the far side of the canal. In the associated video we demonstrate a novel technique, a contralateral transaxillary endoscopic approach to a recurrent disc herniation at the L5–S1 level in a young male collegiate wrestler. In our experience, we have found this particular approach to be useful in patients with an early take off of the S1 nerve root which creates a large axillary window. In several instances this technique has allowed us to inspect the area of the reherniation from both the axilla and over the top of the thecal sac. This particular patient has a large recurrence 2 years after an open microscopic hemilaminotomy and discectomy. In this instance, an approach was chosen that navigates dorsal to the S1 nerve root and ventral to the thecal sac, starting on the opposite side of the spinal canal from the herniation. This approach is described as a contralateral interlaminar transaxillary discectomy.
  • 3,323 View
  • 85 Download

Original Article

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An Experimental Model for Fluid Dynamics and Pressures During Endoscopic Lumbar Discectomy
Neurospine. 2024;21(3):745-752.   Published online September 30, 2024
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An Experimental Model for Fluid Dynamics and Pressures During Endoscopic Lumbar Discectomy
Neurospine. 2024;21(3):745-752.   Published online September 30, 2024
Close
Objective
Endoscopic spine surgery is an emerging technique of minimally invasive spine surgery. However, headache, seizure, and autonomic dysreflexia are possible irrigation-related complications following full-endoscopic lumbar discectomy (FELD). Pressure elevation through fluid irrigation may contribute to these adverse events. A validated experimental model to investigate parameters for guideline definition is lacking. This study aimed to create an experimental setting for FELD with pressure assessments to prove the concept of repeatable and sensitive measurement of intracranial, intra- and epidural pressures during spine endoscopy.
Methods
To measure intradural pressure, catheters were introduced through a sacral approach and advanced to lumbar, thoracic, and cervical levels in human cadavers. Similarly, lumbar epidural and intracranial probes were placed. The dural sac was filled with Ringer solution to a physiologic pressure of 15 cmH2O. Lumbar endoscopy was performed on 3 human cadavers at the L3–4 level. Pressure changes were measured continuously at all sites and the effects of backflow-occlusion were monitored.
Results
Reproducibility of the experimental model was validated with catheters at the correct locations and stable compartmental pressure baselines at all levels for 3 specimens (mean±standard deviation: 1.3±2.9 mmHg, 9.0±2.0 mmHg, 6.0±1.2 mmHg, respectively). Pressure increase could be detected sensitively by closing the system with backflow-occlusion.
Conclusion
An experimental setup for feasible, repeatable, and precise pressure measurement during FELD in a human cadaveric setup has been developed. This allows investigation of the effects of endoscopic techniques and pump pressures on intra-, epidural and intracranial pressure and enables ranges of safe pump pressures per clinical situations.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • A Systematic Review of Complication Management During Uniportal and Biportal Endoscopic Spine Surgery: Dural Tear and Bleeding
    Siravich Suvithayasiri, Ju Eun Kim, Facundo Van Isseldyk, Marcus Serra, Christopher Martin, Viswanadha Arunkumar, Sotirios Veranis, Prashanth Rao, Enrico Giordan, Piya Chavalparit, Nelson Astur, Samuel Cho, Jin Sung Kim
    Global Spine Journal.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Spinal Cord Perfusion Pressure Monitoring after Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Indications, Techniques, and Future Horizons
    Angela Tang-Tan, David J. Caldwell, Alexander A. Aabedi, Maria C. Velasco, Geoffrey T. Manley, Phiroz E. Tarapore, John K. Yue
    Journal of Neurotrauma.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Endoscopic resection of lumbar intradural spinal tumors: A case series on feasibility, safety, and preliminary outcomes
    Facundo Van Isseldyk, Vincent Hagel
    Brain and Spine.2026; 6: 106040.     CrossRef
  • Full Endoscopic Excision of a Large Intradural Extramedullary Tumor: A Technical Note
    Kanthila Mahesha, H. Shatananda Prasad Rao
    Journal of Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery and Technique.2026; 11(1): 124.     CrossRef
  • Controlled versus gravity-based irrigation in endoscopic spine surgery: pressure stability, thresholds, and safety implications
    Rajendra Singh, Thomas Cha, Alexander Vaccaro, Alan Hilibrand, Gregory Schroeder, Gregory Kepler, Afshin Razi, Mitchell Ng
    European Spine Journal.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Fluid and thermal dynamics in endoscopic spine surgery: What surgeons need to know
    Dong Hun Kim, Sang Don Kim, Jin Young Kim, Jae Taek Hong, Jung Woo Hur
    Journal of Clinical Neuroscience.2025; 136: 111287.     CrossRef
  • Primer on unilateral biportal endoscopic spine surgery: technical overview for beginners
    Erick R. Kazarian, Jason I. Yang, Gregory S. Kazarian, Yong H. Kim
    The Spine Journal.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Intra-, Epidural And Intracranial Pressure Changes During Interlaminar Endoscopy, With and Without Dural Tear
    Mazda Farshad, Jana Felicitas Schader, Alexandra Stauffer, Carl Moritz Zipser, Najmeh Kheram, José Miguel Spirig, Marie-Rosa Fasser, Jonas Widmer, Vincent Hagel
    Neurospine.2025; 22(2): 583.     CrossRef
  • Pioneering Promotion in Endoscopic Spine Surgery: Innovation of Fluid Dynamics and Pressure Measurement Models: Commentary on “An Experimental Model for Fluid Dynamics and Pressures During Endoscopic Lumbar Discectomy”
    Yi-Hao Liang, Facundo Van Isseldyk
    Neurospine.2024; 21(3): 753.     CrossRef
  • From the Editor-in-Chief: Featured Articles in the September 2024 Issue
    Inbo Han
    Neurospine.2024; 21(3): 743.     CrossRef
  • Endoscopic Transforaminal Thoracic Decompression for Removal of a Giant Calcified Thoracic Disc Herniation
    Mazda Farshad, Christoph Johannes Laux, Lukas Zingg, Florian Wanivenhaus
    Neurospine.2024; 21(4): 1116.     CrossRef
  • Full-Endoscopic Resection of a Lumbar Intradural Tumor (Schwannoma): Video Case Report and Description of the Surgical Technique
    Vincent Hagel, Facundo Van Isseldyk
    Neurospine.2024; 21(4): 1096.     CrossRef
  • 7,053 View
  • 244 Download
  • 11 Web of Science
  • 12 Crossref