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1.
OBJECT: The aims of this study were to compare the efficiency of motor evoked potentials (MEPs), somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs), and microvascular Doppler ultrasonography (MDU) in the detection of impending motor impairment from subcortical ischemia in aneurysm surgery; to determine their sensitivity for specific intraoperative events; and to compare their impact on the surgical strategy used. METHODS: Motor evoked potentials, SSEPs, and MDU were monitored during 100 operations for 129 aneurysms in 95 patients. Intraoperative events, monitoring results, and clinical outcome were correlated in a prospective observational design. Motor evoked potentials indicated inadequate temporary clipping, inadvertent occlusion, inadequate retraction, vasospasm, or compromise to perforating vessels in 21 of 33 instances and deteriorated despite stable SSEPs in 18 cases. Microvascular Doppler ultrasonography revealed inadvertent vessel occlusion in eight of 10 cases and insufficient clipping in four of four cases. Stable evoked potentials (EPs) allowed safe, permanent vessel occlusion or narrowing despite reduced flow on MDU in five cases. Two patients sustained permanent and 10 showed transient new weakness, which had been detected by SSEPs in two of 12 patients and MEPs in 10 of 11 monitored cases. The surgical strategy was directly altered in 33 instances: by MEPs in 16, SSEPs in four, and MDU in 13. CONCLUSIONS: Monitoring of MEPs is superior to SSEP monitoring and MDU in detecting motor impairment, particularly that from subcortical ischemia. Microvascular Doppler ultrasonography is superior to EP monitoring in detecting inadvertent vessel occlusion, but cannot assess remote collateral flow. Motor evoked potentials are most sensitive to all other intraoperative conditions and have a direct influence on the course of surgery in the majority of events. A controlled study design is required to confirm the positive effect of monitoring on clinical outcome in aneurysm surgery.  相似文献   

2.
Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were monitored during 113 operations for the clipping of 134 cerebral aneurysms. Changes in peak latency and amplitude of early cortical SEP as well as central conduction time were evaluated. In 58 cases surgical occlusion of arterial vessels or other events occurred, and in 17 of these cases such events were associated with SEP changes or loss. Arterial occlusions resulted from temporary clipping of a feeding blood vessel (22), accidental clipping of a vessel (12), and intentional permanent vessel occlusion (8). A total SEP loss was seen in 2 cases of accidental vessel occlusion and in 6 cases of temporary vessel clipping. Significant SEP changes were found in 6 patients with temporary clipping, and once each with retraction of the cerebellum, retraction of the middle cerebral artery, and after intentional permanent vessel occlusion. Response to these changes included reapplication of aneurysm clips, repositioning of retractors, or removal of temporary clips. Stable SEP signals during 13 cases allowed the surgeon to proceed with the surgical course. Despite the limitations of SEP monitoring in certain anatomical locations, it has been found to be helpful in the operative management of some cases such as multilobed aneurysms of the middle cerebral artery, giant aneurysms, trapping procedures, and procedures requiring temporary vessel occlusion.  相似文献   

3.
Electrophysiological monitoring during basilar aneurysm operation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Intraoperative brain stem auditory evoked potential (BAEP) and somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) monitoring was evaluated in 16 patients each undergoing intracranial operation for basilar artery aneurysm. The 16 patients had 18 posterior circulation aneurysms, including 2 patients with 2 aneurysms. Fourteen aneurysms arose from the rostral basilar artery, 2 arose from the midbasilar artery, 1 arose from the vertebrobasilar junction, and 1 arose from the proximal segment of the posterior cerebral artery. Five aneurysms were classified as giant (i.e., greater than 25 mm), and 5 aneurysms were large (i.e., 15 to 25 mm). Ten patients had BAEP and SEP monitoring, 4 had BAEP monitoring only, and 2 had SEP monitoring only. Two patients showed significant abnormalities during operation, including 1 patient with transient changes in the BAEP when the lower pons and the 8th cranial nerve were retracted. Another patient had progressive increases in latency and decreases in amplitude and subsequent loss of the SEP cortical components during a period of intermittent temporary rostral basilar artery occlusion. Wave P13 was also lost during that period. The cortical components as well as Wave P13 returned after circulation was restored. The BAEPs were unchanged in the same patient during the period of temporary basilar artery occlusion. Fourteen patients had no significant abnormalities. There were no consistent changes during the various stages of operation. BAEP and SEP monitoring failed to identify ischemic events in 4 patients with neurological findings of brain stem ischemia immediately after operation (i.e., 25% false-negative studies).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEP) have been used during cerebral aneurysm surgery to monitor the integrity of neural pathways. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of SSEP monitoring as a predictor of neurological outcome during temporary arterial occlusion. In a series of 157 patients monitored, 97 patients had temporary occlusion of the feeding artery. Twenty-three patients developed a SSEP change during temporary occlusion, 15 reversible (recovery of the change after the release of occlusion), and 8 persistent (no recovery) changes. A persistent change predicted a postoperative neurological deficit in each case, whereas, of the 15 patients with reversible changes, only 5 had postoperative deficits. Seventy-four patients had no change on SSEP monitoring but 10 patients did have new neurological deficits postoperatively. The false positive rate was 43% and the false negative rate was 14%. SSEP was a better predictor of neurological deficits in patients with aneurysms of the carotid circulation than of the vertebral-basilar arteries. Despite these limitations, we find SSEP monitoring useful during temporary occlusion in cerebral aneurysm surgery.  相似文献   

5.
SEP (somatosensory evoked potential) monitoring was carried out on seven patients with vertebro-basilar aneurysms during balloon occlusion test, during operation, or after operation. In the patient (case 5) with basilar tip aneurysm, the amplitude of N20 remarkably decreased and this finding closely correlated with disturbed consciousness during transient balloon occlusion of the basilar artery. In another patient (case 6) with vertebral dissecting aneurysm, cerebellar retraction caused transient prolongation of N20 latency during operation. In another case, postoperative SEP monitoring revealed marked reduction of N20 amplitude in the patient (case 7) who showed disturbed consciousness and bilateral oculomotor palsy after operation for basilar aneurysms, but who showed no abnormality in postoperative ABR (auditory evoked brainstem response). The other four patients showed no neurological deterioration and no SEP change during transient balloon occlusion of the parent arteries. Because of the high rate of "false-negative" findings, it remains unclear whether SEP monitoring during surgery for vertebrobasilar aneurysms is of value to predict postoperative deficit due to brainstem ischemia. In our study, however, the changes of SEP were well correlated with neurological deterioration and/or the location of postoperative infarction. In conclusion, SEP monitoring during balloon occlusion tests or operations for vertebro-basilar aneurysms is considered to be useful in predicting ischemic complication of the brainstem caused by the occlusion of the parent artery. However other methodologies have to be developed in order to monitor the pyramidal tract and reticular activating system of the brainstem more accurately.  相似文献   

6.
J P Muizelaar 《Neurosurgery》1989,25(6):899-903
Intraoperative monitoring with electroencephalography and the use of brain protection with steroids, phenytoin, mannitol, and pentobarbital or etomidate were evaluated in 15 patients undergoing operation for an aneurysm of the upper basilar artery. One patient harbored a basilar trunk aneurysm, 1 an aneurysm of the proximal posterior cerebral artery, 3 an aneurysm of the superior cerebellar artery, and 10 an aneurysm at the basilar tip. The size of the aneurysms varied between 5 and 30 mm. Subarachnoid hemorrhage was the symptom exhibited in 12, mass effect the symptom in 2, and 1 patient was asymptomatic but had an angiogram because of amaurosis. There were 9 patients with multiple aneurysms, 5 of whom had aneurysms of the bilateral anterior circulation. Four patients underwent operation early. In 2 patients, the basilar artery was the sole or main blood supply of the whole brain. All patients except the one with the basilar trunk aneurysm were operated on via a transsylvian approach. All patients received 500 to 800 mg of phenytoin and 10 to 20 mg of dexamethasone shortly before and during surgery, and mannitol (0.8 g/kg) 15 minutes before the induction of hypotension or temporary clipping. Three patients showed slowing of electrical activity over the right hemisphere as a result of retraction of the internal carotid artery; with repositioning of the retractor, this disappeared within 10 minutes. Electrocortical silence was induced in 8 patients; this was in anticipation of prolonged moderate hypotension in 2, short deep hypotension in 2, temporary clipping of major vessels--including the basilar artery--in 2, and a combination of deep hypotension combined with temporary clipping in 2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.

Objective

To study an effective method for surgical management of vertebral and basilar artery aneurysms.

Methods

Forty-one patients with 43 aneurysms of the vertebral and basilar arteries were managed by microsurgical clipping. Cerebral angiography revealed basilar apex aneurysms in 17 patients, basilar trunk in six patients, vertebrobasilar (VB) junction aneurysms in three patients and vertebral aneurysms in 15 patients. One patient had two basilar aneurysms, and another had bilateral vertebral artery aneurysm.

Surgical technique

We used a pterional approach in basilar apex aneurysms (n?=?17 patients), orbitozygomatic and its variants in upper basilar trunk aneurysms (n?=?2 patients), combined petrosal and far-lateral approach in mid basilar trunk aneurysms (n?=?4 patients), far-lateral and transcondylar approach for the aneurysms at VB junction (n?=?3 patients) and transcondylar approach for the vertebral aneurysms (n?=?15 patients). Bypass graft was performed in 14 patients with fusiform and wide neck aneurysms, to prevent potential cerebral ischemia due to prolonged temporary occlusion or possibility of intraoperative parent artery sacrifice.

Results

Neurological outcomes were measured on the basis of Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS). The rate of back-to-normal life after surgery in basilar tip aneurysm, basilar trunk aneurysms, VB junction aneurysms and vertebral artery aneurysms was 15/17 (82.5 %), 5/6 (83 %), 3/3 (100 %) and 14/15 (93.3 %), respectively. Thirty-six (87.8 %) patients had uneventful postoperative courses. Two patient with basilar apex aneurysm suffered severe neurological deficits related to midbrain ischemia, two patient with occipital artery (OA) graft bypass had postoperative partial lower cranial nerve palsy, and one death with basilar trunk aneurysm occurred after the 20th day of surgery. Thirty-nine patients accepted postoperative digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and eight patients accepted computed tomography (CT) angiogram, whereas two patient denied either one. All the images demonstrated afferent and efferent vessels without aneurysm in situ. Out of 14 patients with graft bypass, 11 patients on cerebral angiographies disclosed the aneurysm clip and the graft bypass patency, one patient on angiography had unidentified graft bypass patency but no symptom related to the graft bypass patency, and two patients denied the postoperative cerebral angiographies. In 40 patients with a mean follow-up of 3.4 years, 37 patients had good outcome, two patients needed assistance for daily living, and one death occurred due to brainstem infarction related to surgery.

Conclusion

Selection of proper cranial base approach with adequate exposure is effective in clipping VB aneurysms, minimizing the postoperative complications. Graft bypass may avoid parent artery sacrifice and its branches occlusion in patients with fusiform and wide neck aneurysms.  相似文献   

8.
In a multicenter study, 120 patients with intracranial aneurysms presenting a high surgical risk were treated using electrolytically detachable coils and electrothrombosis via an endovascular approach. The results of treatment in patients with posterior fossa aneurysms (42 patients with 43 aneurysms) are presented. The most frequent clinical presentation was subarachnoid hemorrhage (24 cases). The clinical follow-up periods ranged from 1 week to 18 months. Complete aneurysm occlusion was obtained in 13 of 16 aneurysms with a small neck and in four of 26 wide-necked aneurysms. A 70% to 98% thrombosis of the aneurysm was achieved in 22 of 26 aneurysms with a wide neck and in three of 16 small-necked aneurysms. One aneurysm could not be treated due to a technical complication. Two cases required postprocedural surgical clipping of a residual aneurysm. One patient (originally in Hunt and Hess Grade V) experienced procedural rupture of the aneurysm requiring an emergency parent artery occlusion. He eventually died 5 days later. Another patient (originally in Grade IV) had coil migration and posterior cerebral artery territory ischemia. A third patient developed a permanent neurological deficit (hemianopsia) after complete occlusion of a wide-necked basilar bifurcation aneurysm. One patient, harboring an inoperable giant basilar bifurcation aneurysm, died from aneurysm bleeding 18 months after partial occlusion. Overall morbidity and mortality rates related to treatment were 4.8% (two cases) and 2.4% (one case), respectively (2.6% and 0% if considering only patients in Hunt and Hess Grades I, II, and III). It is suggested that this technique is a viable alternative in the management of patients with posterior fossa aneurysms associated with high surgical risk. Longer angiographic and clinical follow-up study is necessary to determine the long-term efficacy of this recently developed endovascular occlusion technique. Close postoperative angiographic and clinical monitoring of patients with wide-necked subtotally occluded aneurysms is mandatory to check for potential aneurysmal recanalization, regrowth, and rupture.  相似文献   

9.
Dong CC  MacDonald DB  Janusz MT 《The Annals of thoracic surgery》2002,74(5):S1873-6; discussion S1892-8
BACKGROUND: Postoperative paraplegia is one of the most dreaded complications after descending thoracic and thoracoabdominal aneurysm surgery. In this study, intraoperative monitoring was applied during resection of descending thoracic and thoracoabdominal aneurysms to detect spinal cord ischemia and help prevent paraplegia. METHODS: Fifty-six patients (descending thoracic, 25; thoracoabdominal, 31) were monitored intraoperatively with both motor- (MEP) and somatosensory- (SSEP) evoked potentials. MEPs were elicited with transcranial electrical stimulation and recorded from the spinal epidural space (D wave) or peripheral muscles (myogenic MEP). SSEPs were obtained with median and tibial nerve stimulation. RESULTS: A total of 16 patients (28.6%) showed MEP evidence of spinal cord ischemia, only 4 of whom had delayed congruent SSEP changes. In 13 patients (23.2%), ischemic changes in MEPs were reversed by reimplanting segmental arteries or increasing blood flow or blood pressure. None of these 13 patients suffered acute paraplegia regardless of the status of SSEP at the end of the procedure, but 1 of them developed delayed postoperative paraplegia after multisystem failure. Three patients (5.4%) who had persistent loss of MEPs despite of recovery of SSEPs awoke paraplegic. CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate that compared with SSEP, MEP, especially myogenic MEP, is more sensitive and specific in detection of spinal cord ischemia, and that intraoperative monitoring can indeed help prevent paraplegia.  相似文献   

10.
Martin CJ  Sinson G  Patterson T  Zager EL  Stecker MM 《Surgical neurology》2002,58(5):317-20; discussion 320-1
BACKGROUND: We estimated the relative sensitivity and reliability of scalp EEG, cortical EEG and somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) to detect significant changes during aneurysm surgery. METHODS: Two observers independently reviewed data from 18 patients who were monitored with scalp EEG, cortical EEG, and SSEPs to determine which if any modality demonstrated significant changes during 25 different episodes of temporary intracranial vascular occlusion. RESULTS: Kappa scores indicating the degree of agreement between the two observers were highest for the cortical strip EEG (kappa = 0.92) and the SSEPs (kappa = 0.82) and much greater than for the scalp EEG data (kappa = -0.07). The cortical strip recordings showed changes more often than either the scalp EEG or SSEP during temporary vascular occlusion. In no case did the scalp EEG change when neither the strip nor SSEP changed. In only 4% of events did the observers feel that the SSEP changed when the strip did not, but in 16% of cases, the strip changed without changes in any of the other modalities. CONCLUSIONS: Recording of EEG from strip electrodes placed on the cortical surface detects changes more frequently than either scalp EEG or SSEPs during vascular occlusion. Different observers were more likely to agree on whether the cortical strip EEG changed during vascular occlusion than the other modalities. This argues for the possible advantages of recording from strip electrodes during aneurysm surgery.  相似文献   

11.
The usefulness of intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM), including somatosensory-evoked potential (SSEP) and transcranial electrical motor-evoked potentials (TcMEPs) in cervical spine surgery still needs to be evaluated. We retrospectively reviewed 200 cervical spine surgery patients from 2008 to 2009 to determine the role of IONM in cervical spine surgery. Total intravenous anesthesia was used for all patients. IONM alerts were defined as a 50% decrease in amplitude, a 10% increase in latency, or a unilateral change for SSEP and an increase in stimulation threshold of more than 100 V for TcMEP. Three patients had SSEP alerts that were related to arm malposition (2 patients) and hypotension (1 patient). Five patients had TcMEP alerts: 4 alerts were caused by hypotension and 1 by bone graft compression of the spinal cord. All alerts were resolved when causative reasons were corrected. There was no postoperative iatrogenic neurological injury. The sensitivities of SSEP and TcMEP alerts for detecting impending neurological injury were 37.5% and 62.5%, respectively. The sensitivity of both SSEP and TcMEP used in combination was 100%. No false-positive and false-negative alerts were identified in either SSEP or TcMEP (100% specificity). The total intravenous anesthesia technique optimizes the detection of SSEP and TcMEP and therefore improves the sensitivity and specificity of IONM. SSEP is sensitive in detecting alerts in possible malposition-induced ischemia or brachial plexus nerve injury. TcMEP specifically detects hypotension-induced spinal functional compromises. Combination use of TcMEP and SSEP enhances the early detection of impeding neurological damage during cervical spine surgery.  相似文献   

12.
OBJECTIVE: To compare transcranial motor evoked potentials (tc-MEPs) and somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) as indicators of spinal cord function during thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Somatosensory evoked potentials reflect conduction in dorsal columns. tc-MEPs represent anterior horn motor neuron function. This is the first study to compare the techniques directly during thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair. METHODS: In 38 patients, thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair (type I, n = 10, type II, n = 14, type III, n = 6, type IV, n = 8) was performed using left heart bypass and segmental artery reimplantation. tc-MEP amplitudes <25% and SSEP amplitudes <50% and/or latencies >110% were considered indicators of cord ischemia. The authors compared the response of both methods to interventions and correlated the responses at the end of surgery to neurologic outcomes. RESULTS: Ischemic tc-MEP changes occurred in 18/38 patients and could be restored by segmental artery reperfusion (n = 12) or by increasing blood pressure (n = 6). Significant SSEP changes accompanied these tc-MEP events in only 5/18 patients, with a delay of 2 to 34 minutes. SSEPs recovered in only two patients. In another 11 patients, SSEP amplitudes fell progressively to <50% of control without parallel tc-MEP changes or association with cross-clamp events or pressure decreases. At the end of the procedure, tc-MEP amplitudes were 84 +/- 46% of control. In contrast, SSEP amplitudes were <50% of control in 15 patients (39%). No paraplegia occurred. CONCLUSION: In all patients, tc-MEP events could be corrected by applying protective strategies. No patient awoke paraplegic. SSEPs showed delayed ischemia detection and a high rate of false-positive results.  相似文献   

13.
Giant basilar tip aneurysms are a challenge to treat because of the complex anatomy and critical vessels that arise in this region. For large aneurysms, with multiple recurrences after coiling, when microsurgical clipping is not possible, a bypass to the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) can be helpful in providing definitive treatment. Two patients with giant basilar tip aneurysms were treated with bypass to the PCA. One patient had a microsurgical clipping and the other had a proximal occlusion of the basilar artery along with the bypass. Long-term angiographic and clinical follow-up was obtained. One patient had marked improvement in symptoms and a stable aneurysm remnant and the other patient had complete occlusion. Surgical treatment with a bypass to the PCA, with clipping of the aneurysm or proximal ligation of the basilar artery can be an effective treatment option for giant basilar tip aneurysms.  相似文献   

14.
Brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) were recorded duringsurgery as a monitor of brainstem function in three patientsundergoing posterior fossa surgery for dipping of basilar aneurysms.In two patients, ligation of the basilar artery, and of a vertebralartery, was associated with deterioration in BAEP and resultedin postoperative brainstem dysfunction. In the third patient,postoperative transient neurological dysfunction occurred followingtemporary occlusion of the basilar artery and this correlatedwith intra-and postoperative changes in BAEP. BAEP monitoringis recommended where temporary or permanent occlusion of thevertebrobasilar system is planned. *Present address: 86 The Stiles Road, Clontars,Dublin 3  相似文献   

15.
Controversy exists over the value of intraoperative monitoring and shunting in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy. Although it is widely believed that contralateral carotid occlusion and previous stroke mandate intraoperative shunting, the susceptibility of these two groups of patients to cerebral ischemia during carotid artery endarterectomy is not well defined. Somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) were monitored in 113 carotid artery endarterectomy patients. Of these, 32 (28.3%) had a previous stroke, 24 (21.2%) had a contralateral carotid occlusion and 33 (29.2%) were diabetic. There were no deaths and only one perioperative stroke (0.9%). Cerebral ischemia occurred in 14 patients (12.4%). Six of these patients had a contralateral carotid occlusion. Some 29 patients (25.7%) were shunted, including 10 with contralateral carotid occlusions that did not have major SSEP changes. In the latter half of the study, 14 patients with contralateral carotid occlusions were selectively shunted (six shunted, eight not shunted) with no neurological complications. Thirty-two patients with prior strokes were selectively shunted (nine shunted, 23 not shunted); of these, one shunted patient undergoing combined carotid artery endarterectomy and coronary artery bypass grafting had a perioperative stroke. Intraoperative monitoring with SSEPs accurately identifies cerebral ischemia secondary to carotid clamping as well as patients requiring shunts. With the use of intraoperative SSEP monitoring, selective shunting may be safely performed in patients with a contralateral carotid occlusion or a previous stroke.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECT: The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of monitoring brain tissue oxygenation (PO2) during aneurysm surgery for the detection of procedure-related ischemia. METHODS: Between 1997 and 1998, PO2 was monitored prospectively in a cohort of 40 patients (42 recordings) during aneurysm surgery in the anterior circulation within the vascular territory of the aneurysm-bearing artery. The position of the probe used to measure oxygenation levels was verified on computerized tomography (CT) scanning on the 1st postoperative day. Because of the mislocation of one probe and the malfunction of another, data from only 38 patients (40 recordings) were suitable for analysis. Relative changes from baseline to absolute nadir values of intraoperative PO2 were correlated with simultaneously recorded somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs), and cardiovascular and ventilatory parameters. The frequency of ischemic events was evaluated with the aid of CT on the 1st postoperative day as a substitute parameter for intraoperative ischemia. Clinical outcome was evaluated 30 days postoperatively based on the Glasgow Outcome Scale. Except for three, all patients underwent surgery for treatment of a symptomatic aneurysm. Mean baseline PO2 was 23.9 mm Hg (range 2-67.2 mm Hg) before clip application. A relative decrease in PO2 (20% decrease in value compared with baseline) occurred in 12 patients and was a sensitive indicator for the risk of ischemia during temporary arterial occlusion, but was less predictive of nonocclusive ischemia (sensitivity 0.5; positive predictive value [PPV] 0.42; p > 0.05). Results of receiver operating characteristic analysis demonstrated a postclipping PO2 nadir of 15 mm Hg as a dichotomizing threshold for the prediction of ischemia. This threshold rendered an improved sensitivity (0.9) and PPV (0.56) for procedure-related ischemia (p = 0.0003). The results of utility analysis revealed this monitoring parameter to be clinically diagnostic. Only PO2 monitoring, and not SSEP at the tibial nerve, was predictive of ischemia within the anterior cerebral artery territory. CONCLUSIONS: Using 15 mm Hg as a dichotomizing threshold, intraoperative PO2 monitoring enables one to identify patients at risk for procedure-related ischemia during aneurysm surgery and surpasses SSEP monitoring. This newly defined threshold based on intraoperative PO2 monitoring provides a basis for studies on treatments for procedure-related ischemia during aneurysm surgery.  相似文献   

17.
Ewald CH  Kühne D  Hassler WE 《Acta neurochirurgica》2000,142(7):731-7; discussion 737-8
OBJECTIVE: Operative clipping is the most effective method in the treatment of cerebral giant aneurysms. But about 50% of all giant aneurysms are treatable this way. We want to report about eight patients with giant cerebral aneurysms, which were in our opinion "unclippable" without causing ischaemia in depending brain areas. METHODS: We describe eight cases of giant aneurysms of the pericallosal artery (n = 1) the middle cerebral artery (n = 3), the basilar tip (n = 3) and of the upper part of the basilar artery (n = 1). One patient with an aneurysm of the pericallosal artery was treated with an extra-intracranial saphenous vein bypass saphenous bypass, in three cases of middle cerebral artery aneurysms an extra-intracranial bypass was also done combined with a resection of the aneurysm. The four patients suffering from an aneurysm of the basilar artery got an extra intracranial bypass too followed by an occlusion of the aneurysm with GD-Coils. RESULTS: There was no peri-operative mortality and no severe peri- or postoperative complication. The neurological symptoms of all patients were unchanged after the operation. An angiographic control showed a complete obliteration of the aneurysm and a free running bypass in all cases. CONCLUSION: Bypass surgery and combined bypass surgery and coil embolisation are effective methods in the treatment of giant cerebral aneurysms, which can not be treated by clipping alone.  相似文献   

18.
The feasibility and reliability of combined use of transcranial and direct cortical motor evoked potential (MEP) monitoring during unruptured aneurysm surgery were evaluated. Forty-eight patients with unruptured cerebral aneurysms underwent craniotomy and neck clipping accompanied by muscle MEP monitoring. MEPs were elicited successfully by transcranial electrical stimulation in all patients. Direct cortical stimulation elicited MEPs in 44 patients. Reduction in MEP amplitude to less than 50% of baseline was considered significant. No postoperative motor paresis occurred in 39 patients in whom transcranial and direct MEPs remained unchanged. Four patients in whom direct MEPs could not be recorded had no intraoperative abnormality in transcranial MEPs and no postoperative motor dysfunction. Four of the other 5 patients manifested significant transient direct MEP changes without transcranial MEP changes. The transient MEP changes were observed in 3 patients during temporary clipping of the parent artery and in one patient with inadequate clipping of an middle cerebral artery aneurysm, and were considered due to insufficiency of blood flow. Decrease or disappearance of direct MEP waves recovered immediately after re-application of the clip and release of the temporary clip. Direct MEP waves disappeared and did not recover until the end of microsurgical procedures in one patient, although transcranial MEP amplitude remained at less than 50% of baseline. She developed hemiparesis postoperatively, which recovered within 6 hours. The duration of temporary occlusion in patients with direct MEP changes was significantly longer than that in patients without (p < 0.05). Direct MEP was sensitive in detecting ischemic stress to descending motor pathways during aneurysm surgery. Transcranial MEPs could be elicited in patients in whom direct MEPs could not be obtained, and during periods such as craniotomy or after dural closure, in which direct MEPs could not be recorded. These findings suggest that combined transcranial and direct cortical MEP recording may improve the feasibility and reliability of MEP monitoring during unruptured aneurysm surgery.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE: Outcome of surgery for giant intracranial aneurysms is still unsatisfactory. The reason for complications is occlusion of perforators or parent arteries by the aneurysmal clipping itself or temporary occlusion of the main arteries. We report the surgical outcome of treatment of giant aneurysms using several advanced techniques which we devised to prevent these complications. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The subjects were eight patients with giant intracranial aneurysms who underwent surgery during the recent five years. Six patients had ruptured and two had unruptured aneurysms. Aneurysms were located at the ICA in five and the MCA in three patients. Aneurysmal sizes ranged from 25 to 50 mm. Preoperative 3DCTA was performed to investigate the aneurysm and the surrounding vessels in all cases. Patients with unruptured aneurysms at the ICA underwent balloon occlusion tests to check the potential for safe temporary occlusion of the parent artery, with SEP monitoring and Xe-SPECT. Intraoperative angiography and neuroendoscopes were used to prevent problems and complications which might be caused by aneurysmal clipping. RESULTS: In seven of eight cases, the aneurysmal neck was completely obliterated with clips and in one case the aneurysm was trapped with STA-MCA anastomosis. Glasgow Outcome Scale of the patients showed good recovery in six, moderately disabled (MD) in one and dead in one. The patient demonstrating MD developed hemiparesis due to vasospasm. One patient died from rebleeding of the aneurysm caused by slippage of the aneurysmal clip despite the confirmation of complete obliteration by intraoperative angiography. CONCLUSIONS: A better surgical outcome of treatment for giant aneurysms was obtained by temporary clips whose placement was based on the results of balloon occlusion test, as well as the use of intraoperative angiography and neuroendoscopes.  相似文献   

20.
Taki W  Nakahara I  Sakai N  Irie K  Murao K  Ohkata N  Tanaka M  Kikuchi H 《Neurologia medico-chirurgica》1998,38(12):826-34; discussion 834-5
Treatment of large and giant aneurysms of the basilar artery remains difficult and controversial. Three large or giant aneurysms of the lower basilar artery were treated with a combination of surgical and interventional neuroradiological procedures. All patients underwent the balloon occlusion test with hypotensive challenge (blood pressure reduced to 70% of the control value). The third patient did not tolerate the test. In the first patient, both vertebral arteries were occluded through a craniotomy. In the second patient, both the aneurysm and the basilar artery were occluded by detached balloons. In the third patient, one vertebral artery was occluded by surgical clipping and the other by detached helical coils and fiber coils. In spite of anti-coagulation and anti-platelet therapy, postoperative thrombotic or embolic ischemia occurred in the second and third patients. Fibrinolytic therapy promptly corrected the ischemic symptoms, but the second patient developed hemorrhagic complications at the craniotomy area 2 hours later. At follow-up examination, the first patient had only 8th cranial nerve paresis, the second patient who had a hemorrhagic complication was bed-ridden, and the third patient had no deficit. Interventional occlusion requires a longer segment of the parent artery compared to surgical occlusion of the parent artery and might cause occlusion of the perforating arteries. However, selected use of various coils can occlude only a short segment of the parent artery. Thus, the postoperative management of thromboembolic ischemia after the occlusion of the parent artery is easier using the interventional technique.  相似文献   

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