2,111 research outputs found

    A study of the anatomical variations of the carotid arterial tree in Equidae

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    The internal carotid artery in the horse is of significant veterinary importance due to its intimate relationship with the guttural pouch, and mycotic disease thereof. The relevance of recognising and identifying variations involving the internal carotid artery lies in the fact that surgical occlusion of the artery is the treatment of choice for guttural pouch mycosis. However, occlusion could be hampered when there is doubt about the anatomy of this vessel and its variation. Conventional angiography and automatic rotational angiographic techniques were used to study the anatomy of the carotid trifurcation and the internal carotid artery on cadavers of three species included in the genus Equus; 50 horses, 26 donkeys and one zebra. Following angiography, arterial latex casting was performed on the horse and donkey specimens with subsequent dissection to harvest the hardened arterial casts. Rotational angiography with 3-dimensional image reconstruction represent a major advantage in the angiographic diagnosis of carotid and cerebral vascular variation compared to conventional angiography. This technique generated superior angiographic images of the carotid and cerebral vascular system of horses, donkey and zebra. In the horse, five variations of the internal carotid artery were identified as follows: [1] the internal carotid artery and occipital artery arising as a common trunk, [2] an aberrant branch of the internal carotid artery that unites with the basilar artery, [3] an aberrant branch of the internal carotid artery that does not unite with the basilar artery, [4] aberrant branch of the internal carotid artery that gives rise to several satellite branches, [5] aberrant branch of the internal carotid artery that has a satellite branch connected to the caudal branch of the ipsilateral occipital artery. Variations of the carotid arterial tree in donkeys were identified as follow: [1] the internal carotid and occipital arteries shared a common trunk, [2] the linguofacial trunk originated from the common carotid artery causing the common carotid artery to terminate as four branches, [3] a short external carotid artery before giving rise to the linguofacial trunk, mimicking the appearance of the common carotid artery terminating into four branches, [4] the internal carotid artery originating far more caudal from the common carotid artery termination. The carotid arterial anatomy of the one zebra studied here showed no discrepancy to the accepted common anatomical pattern of this structure. Aneurysm formation was not identified in any of the specimens

    Microsurgical Techniques in Cerebral Revascularization

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    The surgical management of patients with cerebrovascular disease is reviewed. Our approach to the management of extracranial cerebral vasculature is discussed first, and increasingly more complex areas are then presented. Our discussion reviews the applications of carotid endarterectomy, extracranial-intracranial bypass procedures, and vertebral extracranial reconstruction

    Stent-assisted reconstructive endovascular repair of intracranial aneurysms: long-term clinical and angiographic follow-up

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    Abstract Background and Purpose: The development of self-expanding stents dedicated to intracranial use has significantly widened the applicability of endovascular therapy to many intracranial aneurysms. The purpose of this study was to report the angiographic and clinical outcomes of wide-necked intracranial aneurysms treated with stent. Methods: Between January 2007 and October 2011 we deployed 22 stents in 20 patients with wide-necked cerebral aneurysms. Inclusion criteria restricted the group to adult patients with wide-necked intracranial aneurysms (ruptured and unruptured lesions). Immediate post-procedural angiographic studies were performed to evaluate successful occlusion of the aneurysm as well as patency of the parent vessel. We assessed long term angiography follow-up to detect in-stent stenosis, progressive thrombosis, recurrence and need for retreatment. Clinical outcome was assessed with the modifing Ranking Scale (mRS). Results: Technical success was obtained in all 22 (100%) cases. Angiography immediately after treatment procedure showed complete occlusion in 7 aneurysms (35%), neck remnant in 11 (55%), incomplete occlusion in 1 (5%) and partial occlusion in 1 (5%). During the endovascular embolization procedure no rupture of the sac or bleeding complication occurred; none of the patients needed undergoing surgical crossover. Procedure-related adverse events occurred in one (5%) patient: a brachial artery pseudoaneurysm. Three (15%) patients had neurological complications after procedure, whose 1 (5%) transitory complication spontaneusly resolved. Two patients (10%), had acute complete in-stent thrombosis which resolved after intraarterial administration of abciximab and placement of a new stent in-stent. Of the 20 patients treated with stent deployment, a follow-up imaging study was available in all 19 surviving patients (95%) at an average of 16.2 months (range, 6 to 50 months). The first follow-up DSA, compared with initial angiography, showed no changes in 14 aneurysms (73.7%), progressive thrombosis in 3 (15.7%), and major recurrence in 2 (10.5%). The overall rate of succesful procedure to 6 months is 89.5%; there was 1 case of asintomatic moderate endothelial hyperplasia. The further follow-up imaging study, showed no changes in 17 (89.5%) of the 19 surviving patients, 1 progressive thrombosis and 1 minor recurrence. One month- and long term (average of 16.2 months; range, 6 to 50 months) clinical follow-up showed no worsening in the mRS in 18 (90%) of 20 patients, 1 (5%) mRS 2 and 1 (5%) mRS 6. All the survived patients are alive and we did not observe periprocedural or long-term intracranial bleeding events or symptomatic stent related stenosis/occlusion complication. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms by stenting is feasible, effective and safe; follow-up results proved intact parent arteries and stable occlusion rates in the majority of treated aneurysms. Nevertheless, long-term data on safety and efficacy and larger patient groups are necessary

    Efficacy of clip-wrapping in treatment of complex pediatric aneurysms

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    pre-printPurpose: Pediatric aneurysms (PAs) are distinct from their adult counterparts with respect to typical location, aneurysm type, and known predisposing risk factors. Many strategies have been employed to treat PAs, but, although it has been used frequently in adults, clip-wrapping in pediatric patients has only been reported once. We present a series of pediatric patients that underwent clip-wrapping and discuss this strategy as an effective means of treating unclippable PAs. Methods: Pediatric patients with clip-wrapped aneurysms over a 5-year period were retrospectively identified. Clinical presentation, surgical management, and clinical and radiological outcome of the patients were evaluated. Results: Five pediatric patients with aneurysms were treated with clip-wrapping during the specified period. Three had traumatic pseudoaneurysms, with two subarachnoid hemorrhages from aneurysm rupture. One patient presented with mycotic pseudoaneurysm rupture causing a large intraparenchymal and subarachnoid hemorrhage. Another patient had a dissecting complex saccular lenticulostriate aneurysm with 4 perforating vessels arising from the dome. Four patients had good clinical results, with Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) scores of 5 after at least 1-year follow-up (mean 24.2); one patient had a GOS score of 5 at discharge but no additional follow-up. Post-operative neuroimaging demonstrated vessel patency after clip-wrapping with no recurrent hemorrhages or increase in aneurysm size; however, one had progressive occlusion of the UU IR Author Manuscript UU IR Author Manuscript University of Utah Institutional Repository Author Manuscript Bowers et al. 3 artery in a delayed fashion and had a small clinical ischemic event from which she fully recovered. Conclusions: Clip-wrapping appears to be an effective underutilized technique for treatment of pediatric complex aneurysms that cannot be treated with conventional methods. Keywords: Complex aneurysms; pediatric; clip-wrapping Running Title: Clip-wrapping pediatric aneurysms UU IR Author Manuscript UU IR Author Manuscript University of Utah Institutional Repository Author Manuscript

    Semi-automatic detection and segmentation algorithm of saccular aneurysms in 2D cerebral DSA images

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    AbstractObjectiveTo detect and segment cerebral saccular aneurysms (CSAs) in 2D Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA) images.Patients and methodsTen patients underwent Intra-arterial DSA procedures. Patients were injected with Iodine-containing radiopaque material. A scheme for semi-automatic detection and segmentation of intracranial aneurysms is proposed in this study. The algorithm consisted of three major image processing stages: image enhancement, image segmentation and image classification. Applied to the 2D Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA) images, the algorithm was evaluated in 19 scene files to detect 10 CSAs.ResultsAneurysms were identified by the proposed detection and segmentation algorithm with 89.47% sensitivity and 80.95% positive predictive value (PPV) after executing the algorithm on 19 DSA images of 10 aneurysms. Results have been verified by specialized radiologists. However, 4 false positive aneurysms were detected when aneurysms’ location is at Anterior Communicating Artery (ACA).ConclusionThe suggested algorithm is a promising method for detection and segmentation of saccular aneurysms; it provides a diagnostic tool for CSAs

    The effect of intracranial stent implantation on the curvature of the cerebrovasculature

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Recently, the use of stents to assist in the coiling and repair of wide-neck aneurysms has been shown to be highly effective; however, the effect of these stents on the RC of the parent vessel has not been quantified. The purpose of this study was to quantify the effect of intracranial stenting on the RC of the implanted artery using 3D datasets. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-four patients receiving FDA-approved neurovascular stents to support coil embolization of brain aneurysms were chosen for this study. The stents were located in the ICA, ACA, or MCA. We analyzed C-arm rotational angiography and contrast-enhanced cone beam CT datasets before and after stent implantation, respectively, to ascertain changes in vessel curvature. The images were reconstructed, and the vessel centerline was extracted. From the centerline, the RC was calculated. RESULTS: The average implanted stent length was 25.4 +/- 5.8 mm, with a pre-implantation RC of 7.1 +/- 2.1 mm and a postimplantation RC of 10.7 +/- 3.5 mm. This resulted in a 3.6 +/- 2.7 mm change in the RC due to implantation (P \u3c .0001), more than a 50% increase from the pre-implantation value. There was no difference in the change of RC for the different locations studied. The change in RC was not impacted by the extent of coil packing within the aneurysm. CONCLUSIONS: The implantation of neurovascular stents can be shown to have a large impact on the RC of the vessel. This will lead to a change in the local hemodynamics and flow pattern within the aneurysm
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