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1.
OBJECT: Vertebrobasilar nonsaccular intracranial aneurysms (NIAs) are characterized by elongation, dilation, and tortuosity of the vertebrobasilar arteries. The goal of this study was to define the frequency, predictors, and clinical outcome of the enlargement of vertebrobasilar NIAs. METHODS: Patients with vertebrobasilar fusiform or dolichoectatic aneurysms demonstrated on imaging studies between 1989 and 2001 were identified. In particular, patients who had undergone serial imaging were included in this study and their medical records were retrospectively reviewed. Prospective information was collected from medical records or death certificates when available. Both initial and serial imaging studies were reviewed. The authors defined NIA enlargement as a change in lesion diameter greater than 2 mm or noted on the neuroradiologist's report. A Cox proportional hazards regression was used to model time from diagnosis of the vertebrobasilar NIA to the first documented enlargement as a function of various predictors. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to study patient death as a function of aneurysm growth. Of the 159 patients with a diagnosis of vertebrobasilar NIA, 52 had undergone serial imaging studies including 25 patients with aneurysm enlargement. Lesion growth significantly correlated with symptomatic compression at the initial diagnosis (p = 0.0028), lesion type (p < 0.001), and the initial maximal lesion diameter (median 15 mm in patients whose aneurysm enlarged compared with median 8 mm in patients whose aneurysm did not enlarge; p < 0.001). The mortality rate was 5.7 times higher in patients with aneurysm growth than in those with no enlargement after adjustment for patient age (p = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: Forty-eight percent of vertebrobasilar NIAs demonstrated on serial imaging enlarged, and this growth was associated with significant morbidity and death. Significant risk factors for aneurysm enlargement included symptomatic compression at the initial diagnosis, transitional or fusiform vertebrobasilar NIAs, and initial lesion diameter. Further studies are necessary to determine appropriate treatments of this disease entity once enlargement has been predicted or occurs.  相似文献   

2.
Summary  Objects. To analyze the management-related morbidity and mortality in unselected aneurysms of the basilar trunk and vertebrobasilar junction. The secondary objective was to investigate the factors associated with favourable or unfavourable surgical outcome in order to define subgroups for surgical and endovascular treatment.  Methods. 24 consecutive patients with aneurysms of the basilar trunk and vertebrobasilar junction were included in this study. They comprised 2.7% of all aneurysms treated during the study period between 1990 and 1997. 22 patients presented with acute subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and 2 patients with symptoms of brainstem compresssion. All patients were managed using a standard protocol including surgery at the earliest possible moment, aggressive tripe-H therapy in patients with symptomatic vasospasm and mandatory follow-up angiography. 23 patients underwent surgical clipping and one patient endovascular coiling of the aneurysm. 12 patients had an excellent outcome. 6 patients had a good outcome, resulting in a total of satisfactory outcomes in 18 patients (75%). 4 patients (17%) had moderate to severe deficits. Two patients died (8%). Both patients had fusiform basilar trunk aneurysms. Good or excellent outcome was observed in 7 of 8 patients with aneurysms of the vertebrobasilar junction, 13 of 14 patients with moderate or minor SAH or without SAH (Fisher grade 0 to 2) and all patients with small sized aneurysm (n=6). Factors mostly associated with poor outcome or death after surgical treatment were aneurysm location at the basilar trunk, large aneurysm size or fusiforme aneurysm type and severe SAH.  Conclusions. Location, aneurysm size and the severity of SAH may help to predict the subgroup which highly benefits from surgical clipping of these rare vascular lesions.  相似文献   

3.
OBJECT: The authors report on a series of 29 patients presenting with acute subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) related to the rupture of a vertebrobasilar dissecting aneurysm. Special attention was focused on embolization techniques and immediate and midterm anatomical and clinical outcomes. METHODS: Between March 1994 and January 2003, 29 patients presented with acute SAH caused by the rupture of a vertebrobasilar dissecting aneurysm. Eleven patients (37.9%) had Hunt and Hess Grade I SAH, four (13.8%) Grade II, six (20.7%) Grade III, five (17.2%) Grade IV, and three (10.3%) Grade V. Aneurysms were classified into five groups based on lesion location, and treatment courses were decided. All patients except two were treated by endovascular trapping of the aneurysm with concomitant occlusion of the involved vertebral artery (VA). No technical or clinical complication was observed in 28 patients (97%). Aneurysm perforation occurred during the procedure in one patient (3%). There was evidence of aneurysm recanalization in one patient. One patient with Hunt and Hess Grade IV SAH and two patients with Grade V SAH died. One patient died of respiratory infection 1 year after aneurysm trapping. One patient presented with a recurrent hemorrhage 1 month after treatment and died. Overall morbidity and mortality rates were 13.8 and 17.2%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Twenty-nine patients with acute SAH due to rupturing of vertebrobasilar dissecting aneurysms were treated using endovascular techniques. In most cases, endovascular trapping of the aneurysm and concomitant occlusion of the VA was technically and clinically successful.  相似文献   

4.
OBJECT: The aim of this study was to assess the incidence and outcome of procedure-related rupture of intracranial aneurysms in patients treated with Guglielmi detachable coils (GDCs) and to identify risk factors for this complication. METHODS: Procedure-related rupture occurred in seven of 264 treated aneurysms in 239 consecutive patients. Aneurysm size, history of previous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) caused by the treated aneurysm, timing of treatment after SAH, and the use of a temporary occlusion balloon in the seven procedures in which rupture occurred were compared with the remaining 257 procedures, and these findings were correlated with data from 13 studies in the literature, in which results of 2030 aneurysm treatments were reported. CONCLUSIONS: Procedure-related rupture of intracranial aneurysms during GDC treatment occurs in 2.5% of cases and is responsible for 1% of treatment-related deaths. Risk factors are as follows: small aneurysm size, previous SAH, and probably the use of a temporary occlusion balloon.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Intracranial dissecting aneurysms have been associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) or cerebral ischemia. We encountered a patient presenting with simultaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage and brainstem infarction caused by a dissecting aneurysm of the vertebrobasilar artery, which was diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) but did not show abnormal findings on cerebral angiography. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 55-year-old man had sudden onset of headache and left abducens palsy. Computed tomography revealed a subarachnoid hemorrhage localized in the left prepontine cistern and the left cerebellomedullary fissure. Cerebral angiography showed neither a saccular aneurysm nor fusiform dilatation causing the subarachnoid hemorrhage. MRI demonstrated a small infarction in the left dorsal pons, and an intramural hematoma of the left vertebral artery and lower basilar artery. CONCLUSION: This is a rare case of a vertebrobasilar dissecting aneurysm that simultaneously caused both SAH and brain stem infarction. MRI should be performed in the acute phase of SAH of unknown origin to determine the possible coexistence of a dissecting aneurysm, as occurred in this case.  相似文献   

6.
Female gender and cigarette smoking appear to be risk factors for the development of multiple intracranial aneurysms. An acquired nature is likely in this form. The mechanism of aneurysm formation in patients with sickle cell anemia is apparently different. These patients also present multiple aneurysms that show propensity for vertebrobasilar territory and appear at a younger age. Familial cerebral aneurysms are diagnosed once heritable connective tissue disorders have been excluded. The age of patients tends to be lower and the size of aneurysm to be smaller at the time of rupture in the familial form. These aneurysms are less frequently found in the anterior communicating artery than the sporadic aneurysms. A high incidence of asymptomatic familial aneurysms was detected in people with family histories of intracranial aneurysms studied by means of magnetic resonance angiography. Furthermore, familial aneurysms are more likely to rupture in families having members with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) than in those without. The results of an interesting study using color "power" transcranial Doppler ultrasound in patients with aneurysmal SAH suggest that as the intracranial pressure diminished, the size of the aneurysm increased, and there was relatively little change between maximum and minimum dimensions during the cardiac cycle, i.e., the pulsatility is reduced. The use of postoperative angiography after clipping is a matter of debate. The indication more widely accepted is in large aneurysms with a wide neck, in which incomplete clipping can be suspected. Taking into account the current low risk of angiography in centers of excellence, its routine use may be recommended. Aneurysm remnants, vessel occlusion, vasospasm, and newly identified aneurysms are the main findings that were reported.  相似文献   

7.
OBJECT: The authors conducted a study to investigate the long-term natural history of unruptured intracranial aneurysms and the predictive risk factors determining subsequent rupture in a patient population in which surgical selection of cases was not performed. METHODS: One hundred forty-two patients with 181 unruptured aneurysms were followed from the 1950s until death or the occurrence of subarachnoid hemorrhage or until the years 1997 to 1998. The annual and cumulative incidence of aneurysm rupture as well as several potential risk factors predictive of rupture were studied using life-table analyses and Cox's proportional hazards regression models including time-dependent covariates. The median follow-up time was 19.7 years (range 0.8-38.9 years). During 2575 person-years of follow up, there were 33 first-time episodes of hemorrhage from previously unruptured aneurysms, for an average annual incidence of 1.3%. In 17 patients, hemorrhage led to death. The cumulative rate of bleeding was 10.5% at 10 years, 23% at 20 years, and 30.3% at 30 years after diagnosis. The diameter of the unruptured aneurysm (relative risk [RR] 1.11 per mm in diameter, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1-1.23, p = 0.05) and patient age at diagnosis inversely (RR 0.97 per year, 95% CI 0.93-1, p = 0.05) were significant independent predictors for a subsequent aneurysm rupture after adjustment for sex, hypertension, and aneurysm group. Active smoking status at the time of diagnosis was a significant risk factor for aneurysm rupture (RR 1.46, 95% CI 1.04-2.06, p = 0.033) after adjustment for size of the aneurysm, patient age, sex, presence of hypertension, and aneurysm group. Active smoking status as a time-dependent covariate was an even more significant risk factor for aneurysm rupture (adjusted RR 3.04, 95% CI 1.21-7.66, p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Cigarette smoking, size of the unruptured intracranial aneurysm, and age, inversely, are important factors determining risk for subsequent aneurysm rupture. The authors conclude that such unruptured aneurysms should be surgically treated regardless of their size and of a patient's smoking status, especially in young and middle-aged adults, if this is technically possible and if the patient's concurrent diseases are not contraindications. Cessation of smoking may also be a good alternative to surgery in older patients with small-sized aneurysms.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECT: The authors conducted a study to investigate the long-term natural history of unruptured intracranial aneurysms and the predictive risk factors determining subsequent rupture in a patient population in which surgical selection of cases was not performed. METHODS: One hundred forty-two patients with 181 unruptured aneurysms were followed from the 1950s until death or the occurrence of subarachnoid hemorrhage or until the years 1997 to 1998. The annual and cumulative incidence of aneurysm rupture as well as several potential risk factors predictive of rupture were studied using lifetable analyses and Cox's proportional hazards regression models including time-dependent covariates. The median follow-up time was 19.7 years (range 0.8-38.9 years). During 2575 person-years of follow up, there were 33 first-time episodes of hemorrhage from previously unruptured aneurysms, for an average annual incidence of 1.3%. In 17 patients, hemorrhage led to death. The cumulative rate of bleeding was 10.5% at 10 years, 23% at 20 years, and 30.3% at 30 years after diagnosis. The diameter of the unruptured aneurysm (relative risk [RR] 1.11 per mm in diameter, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1-1.23, p = 0.05) and patient age at diagnosis inversely (RR 0.97 per year, 95% CI 0.93-1, p = 0.05) were significant independent predictors for a subsequent aneurysm rupture after adjustment for sex, hypertension, and aneurysm group. Active smoking status at the time of diagnosis was a significant risk factor for aneurysm rupture (RR 1.46, 95% CI 1.04-2.06, p = 0.033) after adjustment for size of the aneurysm, patient age, sex, presence of hypertension, and aneurysm group. Active smoking status as a time-dependent covariate was an even more significant risk factor for aneurysm rupture (adjusted RR 3.04, 95% CI 1.21-7.66, p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Cigarette smoking, size of the unruptured intracranial aneurysm, and age, inversely, are important factors determining risk for subsequent aneurysm rupture. The authors conclude that such unruptured aneurysms should be surgically treated regardless of their size and of a patient's smoking status, especially in young and middle-aged adults, if this is technically possible and if the patient's concurrent diseases are not contraindications. Cessation of smoking may also be a good alternative to surgery in older patients with small-sized aneurysms.  相似文献   

9.
Management outcomes for ruptured and unruptured aneurysms in the elderly   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Chung RY  Carter BS  Norbash A  Budzik R  Putnam C  Ogilvy CS 《Neurosurgery》2000,47(4):827-32; discussion 832-3
OBJECTIVE: In a patient older than 70 years, the decision to treat an intracranial aneurysm remains difficult whether it is ruptured or unruptured. We sought to review our institutional risks of treatment of such lesions in the context of the risks of rupture and its associated morbidity and mortality in this age group. METHODS: One hundred twenty-nine consecutive patients aged 70 years or older, who were treated at a single institution for an intracranial aneurysm, were retrospectively reviewed. Forty patients were treated for unruptured aneurysms, and 89 patients presented after subarachnoid hemorrhage. Seven additional patients in this age group who had solely intracavernous lesions, as well as one patient with a dolichoectatic fusiform basilar lesion, were excluded. Management outcomes were assessed using a modification of the Glasgow Outcome Scale, and additional physical and functional disability was assessed using the Barthel index and the Reintegration to Normal Living index. RESULTS: Six-month outcomes for the unruptured group were: excellent, 70%; good, 15%; fair, 5%; poor, 7.5%; and death (2.5%). Outcomes for all patients with ruptured lesions (including those not offered aggressive therapy) were: excellent, 34%; good, 9%; fair, 5.6%; poor, 3.4%; and death, 45%. Long-term follow-up was performed by questionnaire to assess physical and functional disability. Although physical disability (Barthel index) was similar among survivors, the Reintegration to Normal Living index, a global assessment of function, was significantly higher in patients with unruptured aneurysms (84.8 versus 70.1; P = 0.05), which highlights the disabling effects of hemorrhage. CONCLUSION: On the basis of an individual treatment center's management risks, annual aneurysmal rupture rates can be estimated that justify treatment in this difficult patient population. Despite recent controversy regarding aneurysmal hemorrhage rates, we think that symptomatic unruptured aneurysms should be treated and good results can be achieved, even in older patients.  相似文献   

10.
Su  Ch. -Ch.  Watanabe  T.  Yoshimoto  T.  Ogawa  A.  Ichige  A. 《Acta neurochirurgica》1990,104(1-2):59-63
Summary A case of repeated subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) caused by rupture of a dissecting intracranial vertebral aneurysm is reported. The clinical manifestations, angiographic findings, pre-operative assessment with neurophysiological monitoring, and surgery are presented. A review of the literature suggests that this type of intracranial aneurysm is being recognized with increasing frequency in SAH and fatality, and therefore exploration and treatment of vertebrobasilar (V-B) dissecting aneurysms is necessary. We emphasize that a balloon Matas test with monitoring of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP), auditory brain stem responses (ABR), and its wedge pressure in occluding the vertebral artery before operation are objective assessments of treatment for dissecting intracranial vertebral aneurysm.  相似文献   

11.
自膨式支架贴覆治疗症状性巨大梭状椎基底动脉瘤   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Li BM  Li S  Wang J  Cao XY  Liu XF 《中华外科杂志》2010,48(12):904-907
目的 尝试应用自膨式微支架贴覆治疗,以对症状性椎基底动脉巨大梭状动脉瘤提供帮助.方法 回顾性分析2007年10月至2009年10月治疗的5例巨大椎基底动脉梭状动脉瘤病例.经患侧椎动脉途径送入Neuroform支架2枚和LEO支架6枚,分别贴覆成形5例巨大的椎基底动脉梭状瘤,同时对1例合并瘤体破裂局部辅助应用Orbit螺旋圈3枚栓塞止血.结果 5例手术均获成功;随访3~26个月,3例患者后组脑神经损害症状基本消失,1例患者三叉神经痛显著缓解但并发单侧轻偏瘫,1例蛛网膜下腔出血患者无复发迹象.3例获数字减影血管造影复查,2例于术后1个月和4个月复查,影像学显示瘤体原膨大部分缩小并较前形态规则;1例于术后2年复查,显示动脉瘤被支架贴覆部分形态较规则,近端原支架未贴覆到的部分瘤体有轻度扩大.结论 应用自膨式支架贴覆成形治疗症状性椎基底巨大梭状动脉瘤的方法可行,瘤体生长得到控制,近期效果较肯定.  相似文献   

12.
OBJECT: Patients with fusiform aneurysms can present with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), mass effect, ischemia, or unrelated symptoms. The absence of an aneurysm neck impedes the direct application of a clip and endovascular coil deployment. To evaluate the effects of their treatments, the authors retrospectively analyzed a consecutive series of patients with posterior circulation fusiform aneurysms treated at Stanford University Medical Center between 1991 and 2005. METHODS: Forty-nine patients (mean age 53 years, male/female ratio 1.2:1) treated at the authors' medical center form the basis of the analysis. Twenty-nine patients presented with an SAH. The patients presenting without SAH had cranial nerve dysfunction (five patients), symptoms of mass effect (eight patients), ischemia (six patients), or unrelated symptoms (one patient). The aneurysms were located on the vertebral artery (VA) or posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) (21 patients); vertebrobasilar junction (VBJ) or basilar artery (BA) (18 patients); and posterior cerebral artery (PCA) (10 patients). Pretreatment clinical grades were determined using the Hunt and Hess scale; for patients with unruptured aneurysms (Hunt and Hess Grade 0) functional subgrades were added. Outcome was evaluated using the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) score during a mean follow-up period of 33 months. Overall long-term outcome was good (GOS Score 4 or 5) in 59%, poor (GOS Score 2 or 3) in 16%, and fatal (GOS Score 1) in 24% of the patients. In a univariate analysis, poor outcome was predicted by age greater than 55 years, VBJ location, pretreatment Hunt and Hess grade in patients presenting with SAH, and incomplete aneurysm thrombosis after endovascular treatment. In a multivariate analysis, age greater than 55 years was the confounding factor predicting poor outcome. Stratification by aneurysm location removed the effect of age. Of 13 patients with residual aneurysm after treatment, five (38%) subsequently died of SAH (three patients) or progressive mass effect/brainstem ischemia (two patients). CONCLUSIONS: Certain posterior circulation aneurysm locations (PCA, VA-PICA, and BA-VBJ) represent separate disease entities affecting patients at different ages with distinct patterns of presentation, treatment options, and outcomes. Favorable overall long-term outcome can be achieved in 90% of patients with PCA aneurysms, in 60% of those with VA-PICA aneurysms, and in 39% of those with BA-VBJ aneurysms when using endovascular and surgical techniques. The natural history of the disease was poor in patients with incomplete aneurysm thrombosis after treatment.  相似文献   

13.
A 58-year-old male presented with severe consciousness disturbance and left hemiparesis. Computed tomography (CT) revealed subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and acute subdural hematoma caused by a ruptured right middle cerebral artery aneurysm. The aneurysm was clipped and the hematoma was evacuated. The patient had almost recovered without new neurological deficits on the next day. Arterial systolic blood pressure was postoperatively controlled within 120 to 150 mmHg. Continuous ventricular and cisternal drainage from the level 10 cm above the external auditory meatus was performed to drain bloody cerebrospinal fluid and prevent vasospasm. Three days after surgery, the patient suddenly lapsed into a coma. CT demonstrated diffuse SAH and bilateral intraventricular hemorrhage caused by rupture of an anterior communicating artery aneurysm. Neck clipping was performed immediately. Unfortunately, the patient died of primary damage due to SAH 3 days after the second surgery. In this case, cisternal drainage was probably important in the aneurysm rupture because of decreased intracranial pressure and change in the perianeurysm environment. Postoperative management of patients with residual untreated aneurysms must consider the possibility that cisternal drainage may result in higher transmural pressure, leading to rupture of the untreated aneurysms.  相似文献   

14.
Two autopsy cases of angiographically determined fusiform aneurysms of the vertebral arteries (VAs) are reported and the appropriate literature is reviewed to investigate the pathological characteristics of both fusiform and dissecting VA aneurysms and the pathogenesis of dissecting aneurysms. One patient had suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) due to dissection of a previously documented incidental fusiform aneurysm. The other patient had harbored incidental fusiform aneurysms coexistent with a ruptured aneurysm of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. The location and pathological features of the aneurysms were similar in the two cases. The aneurysms in both cases displayed intimal thickening, disruption of the internal elastic lamina, and degeneration of the media. A mural hemorrhage and patchy calcification were also found in the case that included SAH. Based on their pathological investigation of these two cases and a review of reported cases, the authors propose that incidental fusiform aneurysms in the VAs are characterized by weakness in the internal elastic lamina and, therefore, have the potential to become dissecting aneurysms, resulting in a fatal prognosis. This suggests that long-term control of blood pressure is mandatory in patients with incidental fusiform aneurysms in the VAs.  相似文献   

15.
The authors report the rare case of a 58-year-old man with segmental arterial mediolysis (SAM) with associated intracranial and intraabdominal aneurysms, who suffered subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) due to rupture of an intracranial aneurysm. This disease primarily involves the intraabdominal arterial system, resulting in intraabdominal and retroperitoneal hemorrhage in most cases. The patient presented with severe headache and vomiting. The CT scans of the head revealed SAH. Cerebral angiography revealed 3 aneurysms: 1 in the right distal anterior cerebral artery (ACA), 1 in the distal portion of the A(1) segment of the right ACA, and 1 in the left vertebral artery. The patient had a history of multiple intraabdominal aneurysms involving the splenic, gastroepiploic, gastroduodenal, and bilateral renal arteries. He underwent a right frontotemporal craniotomy and fibrin coating of the dissecting aneurysm in the distal portion of the A(1) segment of the right ACA, which was the cause of the hemorrhage. Follow-up revealed no significant changes in the residual intracranial and intraabdominal aneurysms. An SAH due to SAM with associated multiple intraabdominal aneurysms is extremely rare. The authors describe their particular case and review the literature pertaining to SAM with associated intracranial and intraabdominal aneurysms.  相似文献   

16.
Summary This study concerns 64 patients with angiographically negative subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) hospitalized in the period 1970–1982. Requisites for inclusion in the study were adequate angiographic demonstration of the carotid and vertebrobasilar systems and no clinical signs of spinal SAH or spontaneous intracerebral haematoma. The clinical data on the 64 cases confirm the close similarity, except for the prognostic factors, between angiographically negative SAH and SAH secondary to rupture of an intracranial saccular aneurysm. The study underlines the benign character of the clinical course and of the medium and long-term prognosis of the condition under study. In view of this, the hypothesis advanced sometime ago relating angiographically negative SAH to the rupture of microaneurysms (Ø<2 mm) of the large cerebral arteries with subsequent complete repair of the artery wall, or to the spontaneous thrombosis of intracranial saccular aneurysms, with the possibility of subsequent recanalization and risk of fresh rupture, would appear to be a reasonable one.  相似文献   

17.
The rupture of an intracranial aneurysm leads to subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). To prevent SAH, unruptured lesions can be treated by either endovascular or microsurgical approach. Due to their complex anatomy, middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysms represent a unique subgroup of intracranial aneurysms. Primary objective was to determine radiological and clinical outcomes in patients with middle cerebral artery aneurysms who were interdisciplinary treated by either endovascular or microsurgical approach in a single center. Secondary objective was to determine the impact of the lesions’ angiographic characteristics on treatment outcome. Clinical and radiological data of 103 patients interdisciplinary treated for unruptured MCA aneurysms over a 5-year period were analyzed in endovascular (n?=?16) and microsurgical (n?=?87) cohorts. Overall morbidity (Glasgow Outcome Score <5) after 12-month follow-up was 9 %. There was no significant difference between the two cohorts. Complete or “near complete” aneurysm occlusion was achieved in 97 and 75 % in the microsurgical, respective endovascular cohort. A “complex” aneurysm configuration had a significant impact on complete aneurysm occlusion in both cohorts, however, not on clinical outcome. Treatment of unruptured MCA aneurysms can be performed with a low risk of repair using both approaches. However, the risk for incomplete occlusion was higher for the endovascular approach in this series.  相似文献   

18.
Most intracranial aneurysms can be managed with either microsurgical clipping or endovascular coiling. A subset of complex aneurysms with aberrant anatomy or fusiform/dolichoectatic morphology may require revascularization as part of a strategy that occludes the aneurysm or parent artery or both. Bypass techniques have been invented to revascularize nearly every intracranial artery. An aneurysm that will require a saphenous vein bypass is one that cannot be treated with conventional microsurgical clipping or endovascular coiling and also requires deliberate sacrifice of a major intracranial artery as part of the alternative treatment strategy. In the past 7 years the senior author (MTL) has performed a total of 110 bypasses, of which 46 were for aneurysms. Twenty-two of these patients received high-flow extracranial-to-intracranial bypasses using saphenous vein grafts, of which 16 had aneurysms that were giant in size. We review the indications for saphenous vein bypasses for complex intracranial aneurysms, surgical techniques, and clinical management strategies.  相似文献   

19.
Lindgaard L  Eskesen V  Gjerris F  Olsen NV 《Neurosurgery》2003,52(2):357-62; discussion 362-3
OBJECTIVE: The incidence of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and intracranial aneurysm (IA) has been reported to be higher in Greenlandic Inuits than in Caucasian Danes, but the rate of familial aggregation in Inuits is unknown. METHODS: This study retrospectively compared the rate of familial aggregation of SAH and IA (at least one first- or second-degree relative with presumed SAH and/or IA) in 120 Inuit patients from Greenland admitted to the Copenhagen University Hospital in Copenhagen, Denmark, from 1978 to 1998 with a diagnosis of ruptured IA with that in 1,037 Caucasian Danes admitted from 1978 to 1983. RESULTS: Inuit patients had a much higher rate of familial history of SAH (23.1%) and of IA (9.6%) than Danish patients (4.3 and 1.6%, respectively). In both populations, familial SAH was associated with lower age at the time of aneurysm rupture. Danish patients with familial SAH showed a higher rate of middle cerebral artery aneurysms (40 versus 26% in sporadic SAH). In Inuit patients with familial and nonfamilial SAH, 42 and 38% of the aneurysms originated from the middle cerebral artery. The overall rate of multiple aneurysms was highest among Inuits, and in both populations, it was increased in the presence of a positive family history. CONCLUSION: The rate of a positive family history of presumed SAH and IA is high among Inuits who present with SAH compared with Caucasian Danes who present with SAH. This finding, coupled with a higher rate of multiple aneurysms and younger age at presentation, suggests a potential genetic influence among Inuit families.  相似文献   

20.
While saccular abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) are thought to be more prone to rupture than fusiform aneurysms, attempts to validate this observation have been limited by the inability to quantitatively define the three-dimensional shape of an aorta. A quantitative three-dimensional shape model may distinguish among shape classes and ultimately be useful in identifying aneurysms at risk for rupture. Three-dimensional luminal surface data of AAAs were generated from computed tomographic (CT) images of 15 patients with small aneurysms (< or =5.5 cm maximal transverse diameter). The centerline was used to construct a shape classification based upon the orthographic projection of the centerline about its central axis. The extent and direction of the individual deviations were quantified as areas on the plane of projection to create a shape classification. Hierarchical cluster analysis was used to verify distinct shape classes. A tortuosity index was calculated as a function of the centerline projection. AAA shape was calculated as a tortuosity index and classified into distinct classes of minimal or increased three-dimensional tortuosity. Thrombus could change the tortuosity index or shape classification of an aneurysm. In several patients with serial CT scans, the tortuosity index changed over time and was correlated with rupture; in three AAAs that ruptured the mean tortuosity increased 29% whereas the mean transverse diameter increased 3.3%. Expanding AAAs develop specific, quantifiable shapes that can be expressed as a quantitative tortuosity index that may be relevant to their natural history. The three-dimensional features of this shape model provide a novel and potentially clinically relevant adjunct to maximal transverse diameter. Larger studies are needed to correlate the tortuosity index with finite element models and the ability to predict aneurysm rupture.  相似文献   

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