Anesthesia for Posterior Fossa Surgery
🔹 Introduction
Posterior fossa surgeries involve the cerebellum, brainstem, and fourth ventricle — areas that are densely packed and functionally critical.
These surgeries pose unique anesthetic challenges due to:
- Close proximity to brainstem and cranial nerves
- Obstructed CSF pathways
- Positioning risks (especially sitting position)
- Risk of hemodynamic and respiratory instability
🔹 Common Indications
- Cerebellar tumors (e.g., medulloblastoma, hemangioblastoma)
- Brainstem gliomas
- Acoustic neuromas / Vestibular schwannomas
- Chiari malformation
- Fourth ventricle tumors or cysts
- Posterior fossa arteriovenous malformations (AVMs)
🔹 Surgical Approaches
- Suboccipital / Retrosigmoid craniotomy
- Midline / Transvermian approach
- Far-lateral approach
- Sitting position approach
Each approach dictates patient positioning, which influences:
- Airway access
- Hemodynamics
- VAE risk
- Neurophysiologic monitoring
🔹 Preoperative Considerations
1. Neurological Assessment
- Evaluate cranial nerve deficits (CNs V–XII)
- Signs of raised ICP or hydrocephalus
- Ataxia, nystagmus, dysphagia, respiratory irregularity
2. Airway
- Anticipate difficult intubation if:
- Craniovertebral anomalies (e.g., Chiari)
- Prior surgeries/radiotherapy
- Evaluate for bulbar dysfunction (aspiration risk)
3. Imaging
- Assess brainstem involvement, hydrocephalus, and vascular structures
🔹 Positioning and Related Concerns
1. Sitting Position
- Advantage: Surgical access, drainage, visibility
- Disadvantages:
- Venous air embolism (VAE) risk (up to 45%)
- Hypotension, bradycardia, due to venous pooling
- Paradoxical air embolism (if PFO present)
- Pneumocephalus
2. Lateral / Park Bench Position
- Common in acoustic neuroma resection
- Risks: Shoulder/nerve injuries, dependent lung hypoventilation
3. Prone / Concorde Position
- Used in midline suboccipital approaches
- Risks: Abdominal compression, airway difficulty, ocular pressure
🔹 Anesthetic Management
🔸 Induction
- Smooth, controlled to avoid ICP surges
- Use propofol, opioids, non-depolarizing NMBs
- Secure airway with reinforced ETT (especially in prone/sitting)
🔸 Monitoring
|
Monitoring |
Purpose |
|
Invasive BP |
Beat-to-beat control |
|
Central Line |
Air aspiration, CVP |
|
Precordial Doppler |
Detect VAE |
|
EtCO₂ |
Sudden ↓ = VAE |
|
BIS / Entropy |
Depth monitoring |
|
NIRS |
Cerebral oxygenation |
|
EEG / Evoked Potentials |
CN and brainstem monitoring |
🔸 Maintenance
- TIVA (propofol + remifentanil) is preferred for neurophysiologic monitoring
- If inhalation used: <1 MAC of sevoflurane
- Avoid N₂O — worsens pneumocephalus, ↑ VAE risk
- Ensure mild hyperventilation (PaCO₂ ~30–35 mmHg)
- Maintain normothermia, euvolemia
🔹 Venous Air Embolism (VAE)
🩸 Signs of VAE
- Sudden ↓ EtCO₂
- Mill wheel murmur (precordial Doppler)
- ↑ CVP, ↓ BP, ↓ SpO₂
🛠️ Management
- Flood field with saline
- Lower head temporarily
- Aspirate air via central line
- 100% O₂, stop N₂O (if used)
- Trendelenburg, left lateral (Durant’s maneuver)
- CPR if cardiovascular collapse
🧠 Always rule out PFO preoperatively if considering sitting position (via TEE or contrast echo)
🔹 Intraoperative Challenges
|
Challenge |
Management Strategy |
|
Brainstem manipulation |
Risk of bradycardia, apnea → Prepare glycopyrrolate/atropine |
|
CN monitoring |
Avoid long-acting NMBs; use TOF |
|
Brain bulge |
Mannitol, hyperventilation |
|
CSF obstruction |
May need ventriculostomy |
|
Swallowing dysfunction |
Consider NGT, delay oral intake postop |
|
Respiratory irregularity |
Anticipate prolonged ventilation |
🔹 Postoperative Considerations
- Airway edema: Due to prone/sitting positioning, brainstem trauma
→ Extubate only if fully awake, protective reflexes intact - Cranial nerve palsies: Hoarseness, aspiration risk
→ Swallowing test, NPO until cleared - Respiratory depression: Central (brainstem) or due to opioids
→ Monitor ABG, SpO₂ closely - Cerebellar mutism: Especially in pediatric medulloblastoma surgery
- Tension pneumocephalus: Look for “Mount Fuji sign” on CT if delayed awakening
- Hypertension: From ICP rebound, pain, or autonomic dysregulation
🧠 Key Viva Points
Q: What is the most feared complication of posterior fossa surgery?
A: Brainstem injury and VAE
Q: Why avoid N₂O in posterior fossa surgery?
A: Increases risk of pneumocephalus and expands air emboli
Q: Which cranial nerves are commonly affected?
A: CNs V–XII (especially IX, X → swallowing issues)
Q: What is cerebellar mutism?
A: Postoperative syndrome in children — speech loss, hypotonia, emotional lability
🔍 References
- Miller’s Anesthesia, 9th ed. — Neuroanesthesia and Positioning
- Cottrell & Young’s Neuroanesthesia
- StatPearls: Posterior Fossa Tumor Resection
- BJA Education: Sitting Position in Neurosurgery
- WFSA: Neuroanesthesia tutorials

