AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the use of endovascular coiling techniques for treating cerebral aneurysms that have a branch included in their wall, using data from 25 patients treated between 2012 and 2016.
  • The methods included various techniques like single-catheter and balloon-remodeling, showing that procedures did not result in loss of blood flow to the incorporated branch, but yielded mixed success in aneurysm occlusion rates.
  • While most patients had favorable outcomes post-procedure, a significant number experienced complications, and the treatment's long-term effectiveness was questioned, particularly for certain aneurysm locations.

Article Abstract

Objectives The aim of this study was to examine the feasibility, technique, and clinical and angiographic outcomes of endovascular coiling to treat a cerebral aneurysm with a branch incorporated into the aneurysmal wall. Methods From 2012 to 2016, 25 patients with 26 cerebral aneurysms having a branch incorporated into the aneurysm (9 unruptured, 17 ruptured) were treated to prevent rupture or re-bleeding from the sac while preserving the incorporated branch by using single-catheter ( n = 18), balloon-remodeling ( n = 4), stent-assisted coiling ( n = 3), or double-catheter ( n = 1) techniques. Results Endovascular coiling was conducted in 26 procedures without angiographic occlusion of the incorporated branch. Post-embolization angiography revealed near-complete occlusion ( n = 8; 30.7%), neck remnant ( n = 13; 50%), and incomplete occlusion ( n = 5; 19.3%) aneurysms. Thromboembolisms were observed in four (15.4%) patients during or after the procedure. A procedure-related neurological deficit was observed in one (3.8%) patient. When patients with a preictal modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 3 presenting with grade 5 subarachnoid hemorrhage were excluded, all patients had favorable outcomes (mRS 0-2). Six (23.1%) recurrent aneurysms were observed during follow-up, five of which were treated endovascularly at 5-22 months without complication. The location of an aneurysm at the ICA-posterior communicating artery associated with the dominant-type posterior communicating artery was significantly associated with recurrence ( p = 0.041). Conclusions Cerebral aneurysms with an incorporated branch were safely treated using conventional endovascular coiling. However, treatment durability was unsatisfactory, especially for dominant-type ICA-posterior communicating artery aneurysms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5703135PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1971400917698002DOI Listing

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