Preliminary results of endovascular stent-assisted angioplasty for symptomatic middle cerebral artery stenosis |
| |
Authors: | Lee Tae Hong Kim Dong Hyun Lee Byung-Hee Kim Hak Jin Choi Chang Hwa Park Kyung Pil Jung Dae Soo Kim Suk Moon Tae Yong |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Pusan National University Hospital, Pusan National University School of Medicine, Republic of Korea. |
| |
Abstract: | BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Stent placement for intracranial atherosclerosis has become an alternative treatment technique; however, stent placement for middle cerebral artery (MCA) stenosis remains a technical and clinical challenge. Our purpose was to assess the feasibility, safety, and effectiveness of stent placement for MCA stenosis. METHODS: Between May 1998 and August 2003, we performed stent placement for MCA stenosis (more than 50%) in 17 patients and retrospectively analyzed the technical success rate, complications, and outcomes over 10 months. RESULTS: Stent placement was technically successful in 16 (94.1%) patients and failed in one patient (5.9%), because the stent did not reach the lesion due to carotid artery tortuousity. In 16 patients, postprocedural angiography showed restoration of the normal luminal diameter. Acute in-stent thromboses occurred in nine patients (56.3%) and was lysed with abciximab. The parent artery ruptured in two patients (12.5%): One died from massive subarachnoid hemorrhage, and the other patient received a second stent over the tear site. Stent jumping (distal migration at the time of balloon inflation) occurred in one patient (6.3%) and was solved by implanting a second stent. Periprocedural complications included subacute in-stent thrombosis (n = 1, 6.3%) and minor stroke (n=1, 6.3%); these were relieved with heparin therapy or local thrombolysis. Fifteen patients experienced symptomatic relief or were stable at follow-up. Angiographic follow-up (n=6) revealed no in-stent restenosis. CONCLUSION: Stent placement for symptomatic MCA stenosis was technically feasible and effective in alleviating symptoms and improving cerebral blood flow. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|