Adult Moyamoya Disease and Moyamoya Syndrome: What Is New?

Cerebrovasc Dis Extra

Department of Neurosurgery, Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Recent developments in moyamoya disease (MMD) genetics highlight the RNF213 gene’s role not only in MMD but also in other conditions like atherosclerotic intracranial arterial stenosis and ischemic strokes.
  • - New Japanese guidelines for diagnosing MMD remove the requirement for bilateral carotid artery involvement, acknowledging evidence that unilateral cases often progress to bilateral involvement.
  • - Treatment advances suggest antiplatelet therapy is reasonable, while endovascular stenting is ineffective. A trial showed that direct bypass surgery significantly reduced complications compared to conservative management for certain MMD patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Recent advances are in the genetics, diagnosis, pathophysiology, and management of moyamoya disease (MMD), and moyamoya syndrome (MMS), a term used to describe moyamoya-like vasculopathy associated with various systemic diseases or conditions.

Summary: Ring finger protein (RNF213) has been reported to be a susceptibility gene not only for MMD but also for atherosclerotic intracranial arterial stenosis and ischemic stroke attributable to large artery atherosclerosis. The latest guidelines by the Research Committee on MMD of the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare, removed limitations of the previous definition that required bilateral involvement of the intracranial carotid artery to make the diagnosis, given the increasing evidence of progression to bilateral involvement in unilateral MMD. 3-dimensional constructive interference in steady-state MRI is useful for the differential diagnosis of MMD from atherosclerosis. Recent advances in the pathophysiology of MMD suggest that genetic and environmental factors play important roles in vascular angiogenesis and remodeling via complex mechanisms. The latest Japanese Guidelines and American Scientific Statement described that antiplatelet therapy can be considered reasonable. Endovascular interventional stent placement fails to prevent ischemic events and does not halt MMD progression. In the Japan Adult Moyamoya trial, a randomized controlled trial for bilateral extracranial-intracranial direct bypass versus conservative therapy in patients with MMD, who had intracranial hemorrhage, recurrent bleeding, completed stroke, or crescendo transient ischemic attack was significantly fewer with direct bypass than with conservative care.

Key Messages: This review presents updated information on genetics, diagnosis, pathophysiology, and treatment of adult MMD and MMS. Despite recent advances, many mysteries still exist in the etiologies of moyamoya vasculopathy. The diagnostic criteria and treatment guidelines have been updated but not yet been globally established. Ongoing and future studies investigating underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of MMD and MMS may clarify potentially effective medical, surgical, or endovascular treatments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11521421PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000540254DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mmd
10
adult moyamoya
8
moyamoya disease
8
moyamoya syndrome
8
genetics diagnosis
8
diagnosis pathophysiology
8
bilateral involvement
8
direct bypass
8
mmd mms
8
moyamoya
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!