Endoscopic orbital surgery
Updated August 2024
Christopher Lo, MD and Daniel Rootman, MD, MS
There has been a trend towards improving visualization during minimally invasive and keyhole approaches with endoscopic instrumentation and techniques. This broad overview covers some of the possible applications of endoscopic-assisted visualization in orbital surgery.
Indications and contraindications for endoscopic orbital surgery
Indications
- Medial orbit
- Well circumscribed tumor medial to the optic nerve (excision)
- Poorly define orbital mass medial to optic nerve (biopsy)
- Subperiosteal: abscess, hematoma, seroma
- Optic canal decompression or other pathology
- Sino-orbital
- Mass primarily in the sinus extending into the orbit
- Cranio-sino-orbital (TONES)
- Mass extending through skull base into sinus and orbital space
- Mass within cavernous sinus or Meckel’s cave
- Frontal sinus
- Mucocele with bone erosion and orbital involvement for drainage (associated with frontal sinus outflow surgery)
- Frontal sinus mass erosion through the orbital roof
- Transorbital access to frontal sinus mass (ipsilateral or contralateral)
- Orbital trauma
- Endoscopic assisted medial wall reduction
- Endoscopic assisted floor reduction (endonasal or Caldwell luc approach)
- Trans-orbital endoscopic surgery
- Transmaxillary pterygopalatine surgery
- Transorbital intracranial surgery of anterior cranial fossa (roof approach)
- Transorbital intracranial surgery of middle cranial fossa (lateral with or without marginotomy approach)
Contraindications
- Relative
- Medical risks for anesthesia
- Excessive bleeding risk
- Bleeding diathesis
- Anticoagulation
- Presence of systemic infection
- Intraorbital anatomic position
- Lateral to optic nerve for endonasal approaches
- Peribulbar anterior orbit
- Absolute
- Inability to tolerate risk of surgery or anesthesia
Pre-procedure evaluation
Complete medical/ophthalmic history with special attention to:
- Known malignancy
- Prior ocular/orbital/sinus surgery or trauma
- Medications and anticoagulation
- Risk factors for anesthesia complications
Clinical examination
- Visual acuity
- Exophthalmometry
- Globe position
- Extraocular motility
- Optic nerve function
- Afferent pupillary defect
- Color vision
- Visual field
- Optic disc appearance
- Palpable masses, lymphadenopathy
- Inflammatory signs
- Cranial Nerve Function
- Endoscopic evaluation of septal position, nasal mucosa and anatomic variants
Preoperative Assessment
- Orbital imaging
- Computed tomography (CT) scan
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
- Angiography/venography
- Ultrasound
Anesthesia
- Most orbital and endonasal procedures performed under general anesthesia due to oropharyngeal bleeding risk
- Throat pack may be considered
Hemostasis
- Stop anticoagulants prior to surgery if possible (according to comorbidity and medical guidelines)
- Nose is packed with 15 oxymetazoline-soaked neurosurgical Cottonoid patties
- Cocaine solution can be used if no contraindications
- Maximum cocaine dose is 3 mg/kg
- Injection of with lidocaine 2% with epinepherine 1:100,000
- Patient can be positioned to 30-degree anti-Trendelenberg
- Blood pressure and heart rate control via anesthesia
- Suction-assisted monopolar and bipolar cautery
- Hemostatic agents: Thrombin, Floseal
Equipment
Rigid endoscope
- Angle of view
- 0-degree tip
- Provides “straight on” view
- 30-, 45-, 70-degree tips
- Angled tips allow surgeon to see “around corners”
- Angles above 45 degree may easily lead to disorientation
- Diameter of scope
- 2.7 to 4 mm
- Larger diameter provides better image, greater illumination and increased durability
- Maintenance of view
- Irrigating sheaths can deliver a stream saline to clear view
- Anti-fogging agent such as cetrimide or FRED (Covidien Surgical, Mansfield, Massachusetts)
- Positioning
- Endoscope held in nondominant hand
- Scope is white balanced, view on monitor oriented and focus adjusted with the focusing ring
- Monitor should face surgeon and be parallel to surgeon’s shoulders
- When used in the nose, endoscope rested on superior nasal vestibule
- In subperiosteal surgery, endoscope rested on orbital rim or retractor
- In certain cases the endoscope may be held through the septum and held in the contralateral nare
Procedure-specific equipment
- Intraoperative navigation
- Fracture fixation hardware
- Osteotomes/rongeurs
- Drills
- Ultrasonic bone aspirators
Surgical techniques
Orbital Decompression Technique (Medial and Floor):
- With patient under general anesthesia, nose is packed with oxymetazoline or alternate decongestants
- Lidocaine 2% with epinepherine 1:100,000 injected
- Middle turbinate is in-fractured and medialized
- Uncinectomy performed
- Maxillary sinus osteum is exposed and enlarged in a posterior and inferior direction
- An axillary flap is created at the root of the middle turbinate and the frontal recess cleared to identify the frontal ostium
- Anterior ethmoid air cells entered through the inferomedial aspect of the bulla ethmoidalis using a spoon curette or a ball probe to find the natural ostium on the medial face and out-fracture the anterior wall
- Ethmoidectomy of the anterior and middle air cells is performed
- Posterior ethmoids are entered inferomedially at the junction of the horizontal and vertical portions of the ground lamella of the middle turbinate
- Posterior ethmoidectomy performed to the anterior face of the sphenoid
- Lamina papyracea is fully exposed from the fovea ethmoidalis superiorly to the maxillary sinus inferiorly and skeletonized
- Remaining air cells are removed from the skull base and laminae fractured, preserving 15 mm of the anterior lamina.
- Posterior extent of a standard decompression is the point at which the thin lamina gives way to the thicker bone of the lesser wing of the sphenoid overlying the annulus of Zinn at the point approximately 2 mm anterior to the anterior face of the sphenoid
- The periorbita is opened, posteriorly to anteriorly, using a sickle knife
- Orbital fat is extruded into the sinus cavity with a pediatric ball probe to help separate the septae
- If an orbital floor decompression is required, the maxillary antrostomy can be further enlarged to remove the medial wall of the sinus
- Avoid damage to the anterior margin of the ostium
- The medial aspect of the orbital floor (maxillary sinus roof) can then be in-fractured downward using a spoon curette and removed with an angled Blakesly forceps
- The anterior inferomedial bone strut may be preserved and bone removed posteriorly to the posterior wall of the maxillary sinus
- The periorbita may then be incised and fat prolapsed into the sinus
Optic Canal Decompression:
- Ethmoidectomy performed to enter the posterior ethmoids (as described above)
- The lower third of the superior turbinate is resected back to the anterior face of the sphenoid and the natural ostium of the sphenoid is identified and opened inferiorly and then horizontally into the posterior ethmoids
- The anterior wall of the sphenoid is opened superiorly up to the skull base so the roof of the posterior ethmoid is continuous with the roof of the sphenoid
- Once sphenoid is entered, the optic canal is seen on the superior aspect of the lateral wall of the sphenoid
- The prominence of the internal carotid artery is visible inferior and posterior to the canal, though anatomic variants should be reviewed on preoperative imaging
- The bone of the lamina papyracea is elevated off the periorbita approximately 1 cm anterior to the sphenoid until the thicker bone of the lesser wing is encountered
- This is thinned with an irrigating and suctioning diamond burr until it can be elevated medially off the annulus
- A microcurrete can be used to elevate the bone off the nerve
- The medial wall of the canal is generally removed for a distance of at least 8 mm from the anterior face of the sphenoid
- The superior, inferior, and posterior extent of the bony decompression will vary with the underlying compressive pathology
Patient management
- Examine in recovery room for possible catastrophic vision loss
- Post operative instructions
- Activity restrictions
- Ice Packs
- Elevate head of bed
- Avoid nose-blowing if sinuses entered
- Monitor for signs of bleeding or infection
- Medications prescribed
- Topical antibiotics
- Pain medications
- Systemic antibiotics, if indicated
- Steroids, if indicated
Preventing and managing treatment complications
Visual Loss (Severe Vision Loss 0.84%; Jacobs, Ophthalmology 2018)
- Prevention
- Meticulous surgical technique with understanding of the orbital anatomy
- Intraoperative pupil monitoring
- Avoid excessive pressure on globe or traction on nerve
- Avoid orbital injections with epinephrine products
- Avoid intraoperative hypotension
- Management directed towards underlying etiology
Hemorrhage
- Prevention
- Stopping anticoagulants prior to surgery
- Meticulous surgical technique
- Maintaining intraoperative hemostasis with gentle pressure, cautery, hemostatic agents
- Management
- Evacuation of hematoma
- If no visual loss and pain not severe, can observe
- If vision threatened, emergent canthotomy/cantholysis
Diplopia
- Prevention
- Meticulous surgical technique with understanding of the orbital anatomy
- Intraoperative forced ductions when indicated
- Treatment
- Treatment of underlying etiology
- Prisms
- Ocular occlusion
- Strabismus consultation if non-resolving
Cerebrospinal fluid leak (1-3% orbital decompression; Limawararut, Surv Ophthalmol 2008)
- Prevention
- Meticulous surgical technique with understanding of the orbital anatomy
- Treatment
- Plugging with orbital fat or nasal mucosal graft
- Antibiotics, if indicated
Historical perspective
First endoscopic orbital decompression was performed in 1990 (Kennedy).
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