https://www.selleckchem.com/products/gw806742x.html Neuroendoscopic resection of colloid cysts has gained tremendous popularity over the last 2 decades because of good clinical outcomes and a low complication profile. However, in comparison to microsurgical resections, endoscopic resection has a lower rate of gross-total resection, which leaves the patient at risk for cyst recurrence. At present, there is still ongoing debate as to the best surgical approach for colloid cysts. Endoscopic resection as a technique has to compete with the good outcomes of microsurgical resections with respect to a long-term recurrence-free outcome. It is the authors' belief that gross-total resection should be the aim of endoscopic cyst resection. In this technical note, they describe their surgical technique for achieving safe gross-total resection of colloid cysts by using a ventriculoscopic system. The surgical technique includes a far anterolateral entry point, navigational guidance, bimanual sharp dissection, use of the endoscopic sheath as a retractor, the small-chamber irrigation technique, and the dry-field technique for hemostasis. The cost of training neurosurgical residents is especially high considering the duration of training and the technical nature of the specialty. Despite these costs, on-call residents are a source of significant economic value, through both indirectly and directly supervised activities. The authors sought to identify the economic value of on-call services provided by neurosurgical residents. A personal call log kept by a single junior neurosurgical resident over a 2-year period was used to obtain the total number of consultations, admissions, and procedures. Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes were used to estimate the resident's on-call economic value. A single on-call neurosurgical resident at the authors' institution produced 8172 work relative value units (wRVUs) over the study period from indirectly and directly supervised activities. Ind