Sphenoid Anatomy - Danger Zone Map
- Boundaries & Relations:
- Roof: Sella turcica, pituitary gland, optic chiasm.
- Floor: Nasopharynx, roof of choana.
- Anterior wall: Sphenoethmoidal recess, posterior nasal septum.
- Posterior wall: Clivus, basilar artery.
- Lateral wall: Cavernous sinus, Internal Carotid Artery (ICA), Optic Nerve (ON), Maxillary Nerve (V2), Vidian nerve.
- Key Neurovascular Structures (Danger Zones):
- Optic Nerve: Superolateral; average ~18 mm from anterior sphenoid wall. High risk of dehiscence.
- Internal Carotid Artery (ICA): Posterolateral (cavernous & clinoidal segments); average ~15-22 mm from anterior wall. Dehiscence common.
- V2 (Maxillary Nerve): Inferolateral; passes through foramen rotundum.
- Vidian Nerve (Nerve of Pterygoid Canal): Inferolateral; in vidian canal.
- Common Anatomical Variations:
- Onodi cell (sphenoethmoidal cell): Most posterior ethmoid cell, superolateral to sphenoid sinus; closely related to ON & ICA.
- Lateral recess: Extensive pneumatization into greater sphenoid wing or pterygoid process.

⭐ > The prevalence of optic nerve or carotid artery dehiscence in the sphenoid sinus wall is a significant surgical risk, reported in up to 25% of cases for the ICA and 20% for the optic nerve depending on studies and sinus pneumatization type (e.g., conchal, presellar, sellar, postsellar).
Surgical Access - Path Choice Pro
Indications for Surgery:
- Chronic sphenoid sinusitis refractory to medical therapy.
- Sphenoid mucoceles, pyoceles, or fungal balls.
- Repair of CSF leaks originating from the sphenoid sinus.
- Surgical access for pituitary tumors (e.g., craniopharyngioma) and skull base lesions (e.g., chordoma).
Contraindications:
- Absolute: Active systemic/local infection, uncorrected coagulopathy.
- Relative: Medically unstable patient, severe uncontrolled comorbidities.
Pre-operative Workup:
- CT PNS (axial, coronal, sagittal): Essential for bony anatomy, disease extent, identifying key structures (optic nerve, carotid artery).
- MRI: Indicated if tumor, fungal infection, or intracranial/orbital complications are suspected.
- Diagnostic Nasal Endoscopy: To assess nasal anatomy, mucosa, and identify associated pathologies like polyps or discharge.
⭐ The transnasal transostial approach is the most common and direct route for isolated sphenoid sinus pathology.

The Procedure - Deep Dive Guide
- Anesthesia & Positioning:
- General Anesthesia (GA) with controlled hypotension.
- Patient: Supine, reverse Trendelenburg.
- Key Surgical Steps:
- Nasal decongestion (topical vasoconstrictors).
- Identify sphenoid ostium. 📌 Landmarks: Superior Turbinate (ST), septum, choana. (Ostium is medial to ST, superomedial to choana).
- Sphenoidotomy: Widen natural ostium or perform anterior sphenoidotomy.
- Complete removal of pathology.
- Ensure sinus ventilation; achieve meticulous hemostasis.
- Essential Instruments:
- Endoscopes: 0, 30, 45-degree.
- Kerrison rongeurs, microdebrider, suction Freer.
- Image Guidance System (IGS): For complex/revision cases, or skull base extension.
⭐ The sphenoid ostium is typically located medial to the superior turbinate and superomedial to the choana.
Post-Op & Pitfalls - Recovery Road
- Post-Operative Care:
- Nasal packing: Absorbable; non-absorbable out in 24-48 hrs.
- Meds: Systemic antibiotics, systemic/topical steroids, analgesics.
- Nasal hygiene: Regular saline douching.
- Follow-Up:
- Scheduled endoscopic debridement (prevents adhesions, clears crusts).
- Complications:
- Intra-op: ICA injury (⚠️ catastrophic!), optic nerve/orbital injury, CSF leak, V2/vidian nerve damage, bleeding.
- Post-op: Delayed epistaxis, infection, sinusitis, mucocele, adhesions/synechiae. ENS (rare).
- Management of CSF Leak:
- Conservative: Bed rest, head up 30°, avoid strain. Lumbar drain if persistent.
- Surgical repair: For large defects or failed conservative approach.
⭐ Vascular injury, particularly to the ICA, is the most feared complication of sphenoid sinus surgery.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Endoscopic transnasal approach is the gold standard for sphenoid sinus surgery.
- Critical structures: Optic nerve (ON) and internal carotid artery (ICA) are at high risk.
- Onodi cell, if present, ↑ risk to ON/ICA; meticulous pre-op CT review is vital.
- Common indications: Isolated sphenoid disease, sphenochoanal polyps, pituitary tumor access.
- Potential complications: ON/ICA injury, CSF leak, meningitis, cavernous sinus issues.
- Sphenoid ostium is the primary surgical entry point, typically medial to superior turbinate_._
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app