Approximately seven decades separate this comment from current days. In this interim, several developments regarding imaging modalities and microsurgical techniques, as well as intraoperative neuromonitoring, were responsible for signifi cant reductions in the morbidity of patients suffering from cerebellopontine angle diseases [ 2 - 6 ]. The progress of neurosurgery as a specialty is intrinsically related to the history of treatment for acoustic neuroma (vestibular schwannoma) [ 5 ]. Dealing with vestibular schwannomas (VS) has developed from almost a death sentence at the beginning of the century [ 2, 4, 7 ] to the current concept of “functional microsurgery” [ 8 ]:
CITATION STYLE
Acioly, M. A. (2014). Vestibular schwannoma: Current state of the art. In Samii’s Essentials in Neurosurgery (pp. 265–283). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-54115-5_23
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