Anesthetic Considerations in Supratentorial Craniotomy
🔹 Introduction
Supratentorial craniotomy refers to surgical procedures involving the cerebral hemispheres above the tentorium cerebelli, typically performed for tumors, epilepsy, vascular lesions, or trauma.
âś… Common Indications
- Gliomas (low and high-grade)
- Meningiomas
- Metastatic lesions
- Epilepsy surgery
- Aneurysm clipping (anterior circulation)
- Cortical AVMs
- Trauma-related hematoma evacuation
The anesthetic management aims to ensure:
- Optimal surgical exposure
- Hemodynamic and ICP control
- Neuroprotection
- Rapid and smooth emergence for neurological assessment
🔹 Preoperative Assessment
1. Neurological Status
- GCS, focal deficits, signs of raised ICP (headache, vomiting, papilledema)
- Seizure history (antiepileptic use)
2. Imaging Review
- CT/MRI for lesion location, mass effect, midline shift
- Evaluate ventricular size, edema, herniation signs
3. Medications
- Steroids (e.g., dexamethasone for edema)
- Antiepileptics (phenytoin, levetiracetam)
- Antihypertensives
4. Comorbidities
- Hypertension, diabetes, CAD
- Evaluate airway (possible difficult airway in skull base tumors)
🔹 Goals of Anesthesia
- Maintain cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP): CPP = MAP – ICP
- Avoid increases in ICP
- Provide a relaxed brain for optimal surgical access
- Facilitate neurophysiological monitoring (when needed)
- Allow for rapid emergence for neurological evaluation
🔹 Intraoperative Considerations
🔸 1. Monitoring
âś… Standard Monitoring
- ECG, NIBP, SpOâ‚‚, EtCOâ‚‚, temperature
âś… Advanced Monitoring
- Arterial line: Beat-to-beat BP and ABGs
- CVP line: For large tumors, mannitol response
- ICP monitoring: In select cases
- Neuromonitoring: SSEP, MEP, EEG (especially in eloquent cortex lesions)
- Urine output: Especially with osmotic diuretics
🔸 2. Anesthetic Technique
âś… Induction
- Smooth, avoid coughing or bucking
- Agents: Propofol, etomidate, or thiopentone
- Short-acting opioids (fentanyl/remifentanil)
Avoid ketamine (↑CBF, ↑ICP)
âś… Airway
- Secure with oral ETT, fixed well to prevent dislodgement during positioning
- May need reinforced tube for head fixation
âś… Maintenance
- Balanced anesthesia:
- TIVA (propofol + remifentanil) preferred if evoked potentials used
- Volatile agents: Isoflurane, sevoflurane (<1 MAC) if monitoring not used
- Muscle relaxation: Avoid during MEP monitoring
- Avoid Nâ‚‚O: Increases CBF, risk of air embolism
- Controlled ventilation to maintain EtCO₂ ~ 30–35 mmHg (mild hyperventilation)
🔸 3. Positioning
- Common: Supine or lateral, with head fixed in Mayfield clamp
- Padding of pressure points essential
- Head elevated ~15–30° to promote venous drainage and reduce ICP
Ensure neck is not kinked → impaired venous outflow → ↑ICP
🔸 4. Brain Relaxation Strategies
âś… Pharmacologic
- Mannitol 0.25–1 g/kg IV
- Furosemide adjunct
- Steroids (for tumors, not trauma)
- Propofol or barbiturates (decrease CMR and ICP)
âś… Physiologic
- Head elevation
- Controlled ventilation (PaCO₂ ~30–35 mmHg)
- Avoid hyperthermia
🔸 5. Fluid and Hemodynamic Management
- Maintain euvolemia
- Prefer isotonic crystalloids (NS, balanced salt solutions)
- Avoid glucose-containing fluids → risk of hyperglycemia and worsened ischemia
- Colloids: used cautiously
- Blood loss replacement guided by monitoring
Avoid hypotension: CPP = MAP – ICP; ensure adequate MAP at all times
🔸 6. Temperature Management
- Maintain normothermia
- Hypothermia affects coagulation, emergence
- Hyperthermia increases cerebral metabolic rate (CMROâ‚‚)
🔸 7. Emergence and Extubation
Goals:
- Smooth, controlled, rapid emergence for neuro exam
- Avoid coughing, bucking, agitation → ↑ICP, risk of hemorrhage
Techniques:
- Use short-acting agents (TIVA)
- Consider deep extubation in selected patients
- Reversal of NMB + full awake state + hemodynamic stability essential
🔹 Special Considerations
âś… Awake Craniotomy
- For tumors near eloquent cortex (motor, language areas)
- Requires:
- Asleep–awake–asleep or awake throughout technique
- Scalp block, conscious sedation (dexmedetomidine, remifentanil)
- Continuous neuro exam during resection
âś… Seizure Prophylaxis
- Perioperative antiepileptics (phenytoin, levetiracetam)
- Avoid agents that lower seizure threshold (e.g., enflurane)
âś… VTE Prophylaxis
- Sequential compression devices
- LMWH delayed 24 hrs post-op if no bleeding
âś… DVT Risk
- Reduced mobility, tumor-induced hypercoagulability
🔹 Postoperative Care
- Close monitoring in ICU or HDU
- Serial neurological exams
- ICP and CPP monitoring in selected patients
- Pain control: IV opioids, NSAIDs cautiously (if no bleeding risk)
- Monitor for:
- Rebleed
- Seizures
- Electrolyte imbalance (esp. SIADH or DI)
- CSF leaks or pneumocephalus
âś… What Makes Supratentorial Craniotomy Anesthetically Unique?
1. Proximity to Eloquent Cortex
- Lesions often lie near language (Broca’s/Wernicke’s), motor, or sensory cortices
- → Requires intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (SSEP, MEP)
- → May require awake craniotomy with patient cooperation
This is unlike infratentorial surgery (brainstem, cerebellum) where such mapping is rarely needed.
2. Awake Craniotomy is Common
- Often done to maximize tumor resection while preserving function
- Demands:
- Patient cooperation
- Precise sedation titration
- Impeccable airway and hemodynamic control
Rarely done for infratentorial cases due to anatomical constraints and risk of brainstem compromise.
3. Positioning Risks are Lower — but Still Important
- Usually supine or lateral position
- Less risk of venous air embolism than sitting posterior fossa position
- But still must ensure neutral neck → avoid venous congestion → ↓ICP
4. Focus on Cerebral Protection, Not Cranial Nerve Function
- Unlike posterior fossa surgery (brainstem, cranial nerves), supratentorial craniotomy emphasizes:
- CMROâ‚‚ control
- ICP and CPP regulation
- Preventing seizures
No cranial nerve monitoring needed here (no IX–XII risk).
5. Brain Relaxation is More Critical for Surgical Exposure
- The craniotomy flap is typically smaller
- Surgeons require a soft, relaxed brain to access deep lesions
- → More aggressive use of:
- Mannitol
- Hyperventilation
- Diuretics
- Propofol burst suppression (in selected cases)
6. High Risk of Postoperative Seizures
- Supratentorial lesions are closer to cortex → higher epileptogenic potential
- Perioperative seizure prophylaxis more critical than infratentorial lesions
7. Rapid Emergence is Critical
- To check:
- Limb strength
- Language function
- Consciousness
- Delayed emergence = concern for hematoma, edema, ischemia
Posterior fossa patients may remain ventilated longer due to brainstem proximity.
🔸 Practical Differences: Supratentorial vs Infratentorial Craniotomy
|
Feature |
Supratentorial Craniotomy |
Infratentorial Craniotomy |
|
Position |
Supine / lateral |
Prone / sitting / park bench |
|
Common pathology |
Tumor, epilepsy, trauma |
Tumor, vascular malformation |
|
Airway access |
Generally easy |
Often difficult due to positioning |
|
Major concern |
Brain relaxation, seizures |
Cranial nerve injury, VAE |
|
Monitoring |
SSEP, MEP, Awake mapping |
BAEP, EMG (cranial nerves) |
|
Extubation goal |
Rapid emergence |
May delay due to brainstem handling |
|
Awake craniotomy |
Common |
Rare |
When Supratentorial Craniotomy Becomes “Special”: Clinical Examples
1. Left Temporal Lobe Tumor
- Near language areas → awake craniotomy, speech testing
- Anesthetic must allow:
- Sedation → awake → sedation cycle
- Zero coughing or movement
2. Deep-Seated Insular Glioma
- High risk of edema, vascular injury
- ICP control paramount
- May use advanced neurophysiologic monitoring
3. Frontal AVM
- Can bleed during manipulation
- Requires tight MAP control, volume status, and neuro-monitoring
📝 Viva Tip
Q: What is the hallmark of anesthesia in supratentorial craniotomy?
A: Optimizing cerebral conditions (CPP, ICP), ensuring a relaxed brain, enabling neurophysiological monitoring or awake mapping, and achieving rapid emergence for post-op neuro assessment.
🔍 Suggested References
- Miller’s Anesthesia, 9th Edition – Chapter on Craniotomy
- Cottrell and Young’s Neuroanesthesia – Supratentorial tumor anesthesia
- BJA Review Articles – Advances in neuroanesthesia
- StatPearls – Craniotomy Anesthesia
- WFSA – Neuroanesthesia modules

