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Prospective factors of temporary arterial occlusion during anterior communicating artery aneurysm repair. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to identify factors that predict complications after temporary arterial occlusion (TAO) during surgeries for anterior communicating artery (ACom) aneurysms.
  • Of 32 patients who underwent ACom aneurysm repair, 21 required TAO, focusing on how various clinical factors impacted their postoperative outcomes.
  • Larger aneurysms were treated with longer TAO times but no direct link was found between TAO duration and patient outcomes; age and initial coma scale scores were significant predictors of poor outcomes, while many patients experienced some complications yet two-thirds had favorable recoveries.

Article Abstract

Introduction: This study was undertaken to determine variables that could predict, in the perioperative period of anterior communicating artery (ACom) aneurysms surgeries, the likelihood of postoperative sequelae and complications, after temporary arterial occlusion (TAO).

Patients And Methods: In a universe of 32 patients submitted to ACom aneurysm repair in the last 7 years, 21 needed TAO intraoperatively, and had their data examined retrospectively.

Results: Aneurysms larger than 7 mm were more likely to be treated with longer TAO time than small aneurysms, (p < 0.0001). There was no statistical correlation between time of occlusion and outcome. Age, Glasgow Coma Scale at initial evaluation, and Fisher scale at first CT scanning were independent factors of unfavorable outcome (p < 0.001). Meanwhile gender, tobacco addiction, obesity, arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia, location of TAO (A1 or A2), intraoperative rupture (IR) and the aneurysm size were not identified as independent prognostic factors.During follow-up period, two thirds of the patients had a favorable outcome, accomplishing normal daily life activities without major complications. Most patients developed clinical vasospasm (66.6 %), with 19 % of the patients harboring a severe disease. Delayed ischemic neurological deficit was observed in 28.5 %, without any statistical correlation to time of TAO or IR.

Conclusion: TAO during ACom aneurysm repair does not seem to add more morbidities to the procedure, and is not an independent prognostic factor.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-04981-6_39DOI Listing

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