“…More recently, surgical innovation and development of novel tools have enabled some neurosurgeons to approach deep-seated lesions using several safe entry zones-areas where the brainstem may be traversed with minimal or acceptable morbidity. 2,4,5 Fiber dissections and neuroimaging techniques, such as MRI tractography, are increasingly used to supplement anatomical knowledge by showing the relationship between the lesion and the eloquent white matter tracts; this assists surgeons with the selection of an approach 7,8 and decreases morbidity associated with manipulation of the brainstem during resection. In cases of lesions located deep in the ventral midbrain, the anterior mesencephalic (i.e., perioculomotor) safe entry zone has been described by Cavalcanti et al 2 and Kalani et al 4 This safe entry zone makes use of the placement of the pyramidal tract, which is located in the middle threefifths of the cerebral peduncle, to remove ventral lesions by entering the brainstem medial to this tract, lateral to the oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve [CN] III), and between the posterior cerebral artery and the superior cerebellar artery.…”