| Literature DB >> 22022319 |
Marc A Lazzaro1, Aamir Badruddin, Osama O Zaidat, Ziad Darkhabani, Dhruvil J Pandya, John R Lynch.
Abstract
Endovascular tumor embolization as adjunctive therapy for head and neck cancers is evolving and has become an important part of the tools available for their treatment. Careful study of tumor vascular anatomy and adhering to general principles of intra-arterial therapy can prove this approach to be effective and safe. Various embolic materials are available and can be suited for a given tumor and its vascular supply. This article aims to summarize current methods and agents used in endovascular head and neck tumor embolization and discuss important angiographic and treatment characteristics of selected common head and neck tumors.Entities:
Keywords: coil; liquid embolic; neuroendovascular; vascular tumors
Year: 2011 PMID: 22022319 PMCID: PMC3195266 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2011.00064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
External carotid arteries, associated cranial nerves, and notable anastomoses.
| Artery | CN at risk (notable supply pathway) | Notable anastomoses |
|---|---|---|
| Superior thyroid | X, superior laryngeal nerve branch (superior laryngeal artery) | Contralateral superior thyroid and inferior thyroid arteries |
| Lingual | XII, extra-cranial segment (multiple branches depending on regional hemodynamic balance) | Contralateral lingual artery, superior thyroid artery |
| Facial | Rare direct CN association | Lingual artery, ophthalmic artery, rarely with ascending pharyngeal |
| Ascending pharyngeal | IV (via MHT), V, VI (jugular br. and via MHT), VII, VIII, IX (jugular br.), X (jugular br.), XI (jugular br. and musculospinal br.), XII (hypoglossal br.) | ICA, VA, MHT, middle meningeal artery, inferior tympanic artery |
| Posterior auricular | VII (stylomastoid br.) | Meningeal anastomoses with MMA and ascending pharyngeal |
| Occipital | VII (stylomastoid br.) | Trans-osseous to posterior fossa, muscular branches to VA |
| Internal maxillary | III (via ILT), V (artery of foramen rotundum), VI (via ILT) | ICA (via Vidian artery and ILT), ophthalmic artery |
| Middle meningeal | V (cavernous br.), VI, VII (petrous br.) | Recurrent ophthalmic to eye and ICA, ILT |
| Superficial temporal | Rarely via anastomoses to VII and VIII. | Ophthalmic artery via the supraorbital branch |
CN, cranial nerve; ICA, internal carotid artery; VA, vertebral artery; MHT, meningo-hypophyseal trunk; ILT, infero-lateral trunk; br, branch.
Figure 1Angiogram from a patient with a juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (JNA) demonstrating subtle anastomosis between the external and internal carotid arteries via the Vidian artery. The left internal maxillary artery (white arrow) supplies a JNA as demonstrated by the left external carotid artery (ECA) injection (A) and the left internal carotid artery (ICA) injection with reflux (B). A Vidian artery is noted (white arrowheads) in the early arterial phase left ICA injection on lateral (B) and anteroposterior (C) injections. Faint opacification of the tumor arises from the Vidian artery in the capillary phase of the same ICA injection (D). Post-embolization ECA injection (E) demonstrates complete devascularization. Post-embolization, the Vidian artery opacification is attenuated (F).
Commonly used embolic materials and characteristics.
| Embolic agent | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| PVA | Microvasculature penetration | Radiolucent |
| Easy to use | Irregular shapes may allow recanalization | |
| Microspheres | Microvasculature penetration | Fragile |
| Minimal clumping | Many are radiolucent | |
| Gelfoam | Medium to large vessel occlusions | Temporary |
| Inexpensive, easy to use | ||
| nBCA | Rapid solidification and occlusion | Rapid solidification |
| Can flow into complex angioarchitecture | Catheter retainment | |
| Onyx | Slower solidification | Catheter retainment |
| Can flow into complex angioarchitecture | ||
| Coils | Precise deployment | Possible dislodgement and embolization |
| Useful in high-flow vessels | ||
Figure 2A right external carotid artery injection (A,B) demonstrates a hypervascular, dural-based, left frontal parasagittal tumor consistent with a meningioma. An anteroposterior view of a selective right middle meningeal artery injection shows characteristic features including a prominent core vascular supply with a sunburst appearance (C) and a homogenously intense and prolonged vascular stain (D). A right external carotid artery injection (E,F) performed after PVA particle embolization demonstrates successful devascularization of middle meningeal artery supply to the meningioma.
Figure 3Contrast enhanced MRI images of a middle cranial fossa meningioma obtained before (A) and after (B) endovascular tumor embolization with PVA particles demonstrate devascularization.
Figure 4A left internal carotid artery injection demonstrates a highly vascular mass in the region of the anterior cranial fossa predominantly supplied by dural branches from the left ophthalmic artery and branches of the anterior cerebral artery and characteristics consistent with a hemangiopericytoma (A–C). Tumor supply involves relatively few larger vessels with extensive penetration by small branching vessels. Magnetic resonance imaging with contrast shows an enhancing, dural-based, bifrontal mass in the anterior cranial fossa (D,E). The origin of vessel supply from the ophthalmic arteries limited the ability to safely embolize the tumor. Partial pre-operative devascularization was achieved with 45–150 and 150–250 μm PVA particles injected into distal left ophthalmic artery branches supplying the tumor (F). Pathology confirmed hemangiopericytoma.
Figure 5An MRI brain demonstrates a nasal cavity lesion consistent with a juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (JNA; arrows; A,B). Left external carotid angiogram with anteroposterior (C) and lateral (D) projections demonstrate a hypervascular lesion (arrows) within the left nasopharyngeal region with predominant blood supply from the artery of the pterygoid canal and posterior nasopharyngeal branches of the distal internal maxillary artery.
Figure 6Continued from Figure . After superselective embolization with 45–150 μm and 350–500 μm PVA particles, a left external carotid angiogram in anteroposterior (A) and lateral (B) projections demonstrates attenuated contrast opacification of the lesion (black arrows). Two pushable coils were then deployed into the distal internal maxillary artery [white arrows, anteroposterior (C) and lateral (D) projections] to complete embolization of the lesion.
Figure 7Anteroposterior projection of a left common carotid artery injection demonstrates a large hypervascular tumor at the carotid bifurcation consistent with a paraganglioma. Characteristics including splaying of the internal and external carotid arteries (A) and intense tumor blush (B) are shown. Arterial supply includes branches of the ascending pharyngeal artery (arrow) arising from a common pharyngo-occipital trunk (not shown) that originates from the internal carotid artery.