Literature DB >> 20023539

Wartime traumatic aneurysms: acute presentation, diagnosis, and multimodal treatment of 64 craniocervical arterial injuries.

Randy S Bell1, Alexander H Vo, Ryan Roberts, John Wanebo, Rocco A Armonda.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Operation Iraqi Freedom has resulted in a significant number of closed and penetrating head injuries, and a consequence of both has been the accompanying neurovascular injuries. Here we review the largest reported population of patients with traumatic neurovascular disease and offer our experience with both endovascular and surgical management.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis of all military casualties returning to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, from April 2003 until April 2008 was performed. All patients undergoing diagnostic cerebral angiography during their inpatient stay were included in the study.
RESULTS: A total of 513 war trauma-related consults were performed from April 2003 to April 2008, resulting in the evaluation of 408 patients with closed and penetrating head injuries. In this population, 279 angiographic studies were performed in 187 patients (25 closed craniocervical injuries, 162 penetrating craniocervical injuries), resulting in the detection of 64 vascular injuries in 48 patients (26.2% of those studied, 34% prevalence). Vascular injuries were characterized by traumatic intracranial aneurysms (TICAs) (n = 31), traumatic extracalvarial aneurysms (TECAs) (n = 19), arterial dissections (n = 11), and arteriovenous fistulae (n = 3). The average TICA size on admission was 4.1 mm, with an observed increase in aneurysm size in 11 cases. In the TICA/TECA group, 24 aneurysms in 23 patients were treated endovascularly with either coiling or stent-assisted coiling, resulting in preservation of the parent artery in 12 of 24 vessels (50%). The injuries in 3 patients in this group progressed despite endovascular treatment and required definitive clip exclusion. Thirteen additional aneurysms in 8 patients were treated surgically, resulting in parent artery preservation in 4 cases (30.8%). Eleven of the 13 remaining TICAs/TECAs resolved spontaneously without treatment. A total of 6 aneurysm ruptures (average size, 8.25 mm) occurred, resulting in 3 deaths. Four of 6 ruptures occurred in TICAs in which the interval size increase was noted angiographically.
CONCLUSION: The management of traumatic vascular injury has evolved with technological advancement and the willingness of the neurosurgeon to intervene. Although open surgical intervention remains a viable solution, endovascular options are available and safe and can effectively temporize a patient while acute sequelae of serious head injury resolve.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20023539     DOI: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000361285.50218.A8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosurgery        ISSN: 0148-396X            Impact factor:   4.654


  18 in total

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2.  Head and neck neurovascular trauma: Clinical and angiographic correlation.

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5.  Pipeline embolization device for the treatment of a traumatic intracranial aneurysm in a child.

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8.  An unusual case of cerebral penetrating injury by a driven bone fragment secondary to blunt head trauma.

Authors:  Jae Il Lee; Jun Kyeung Ko; Seung Heon Cha; In Ho Han
Journal:  J Korean Neurosurg Soc       Date:  2011-12-31

9.  Localizing Clinical Patterns of Blast Traumatic Brain Injury Through Computational Modeling and Simulation.

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Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2021-05-20       Impact factor: 4.003

10.  Treatment of Traumatic Intracranial Pseudoaneurysms: A Single-Center Experience.

Authors:  Yingwu Shi; Yuan Gao; Yufei Liu; Wenxing Cui; Gaoyang Zhou; Liang Wang; Jia Yu; Tao Zhang; Yan Qu; Jianping Deng; Shunnan Ge
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