Background: Blister aneurysms are high-risk intracranial vascular lesions. Definitive treatment of these lesions has been challenging. Severe disability or mortality rates are as high as 55% when these lesions are treated with open surgery.
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June 2020
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is a disease process of abnormally increased intracranial pressure in the absence of a mass lesion. Medical management, optic nerve fenestration, and surgical shunting procedures have failed to produce consistently successful results. In an unknown percentage of cases, IIH is caused by dural venous sinus obstruction which can be cured by endovascular treatment with dural venous sinus stent placement.
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June 2020
Neuroangiography (NA) is a minimally invasive procedure used to diagnose patients with neurovascular diseases. Noninvasive imaging has improved dramatically in recent years and is utilized more frequently; however, further evaluation with NA is still required in certain cases. NA indications include intracranial (cerebral aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations, dural arteriovenous fistula, cerebral vasculitis, cerebral vasospasm, ischemic stroke, nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracerebral hemorrhage, Moyamoya, vein of Galen malformation, intracranial tumors, and pseudotumor cerebri) and extracranial (internal and common carotid artery stenosis, vertebral artery stenosis, carotid artery blowout, vertebral artery blowout, epistaxis, oropharyngeal bleeding, and carotid body tumor) pathologies which can help with diagnosis and potential subsequent endovascular treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The second-generation pipeline embolization device (PED), flex, has improved opening and resheathing ability compared to the first-generation classic PED device. A previously reported single-institutional study suggests that the PED flex devices are associated with lower rates of complications. However, there was limited discussion regarding the complication rate with respect to microcatheter choice for PED delivery and deployment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Importance: Dural arteriovenous fistulas (DAVFs) may present unique challenges for treatment depending on the anatomy and pattern of venous drainage. If endovascular techniques are to be employed, the DAVF must be amenable to transvenous or transarterial therapy. When access of peripheral vasculature does not provide a straightforward path, less conventional options may be available.
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