| Literature DB >> 23938115 |
Kangmin He1, Wei Zhu, Liang Chen, Ying Mao.
Abstract
Prevention of rebleeding plays an important role in the treatment of hemorrhagic moyamoya disease, because rebleeding results in high mortality and morbidity. We discuss possible treatment for patients with moyamoya disease accompanied with distal choroidal artery aneurysms and review the literature to summarize clinical treatment and mechanisms. The cases of three male patients who suffered from intraventricular hemorrhage are presented. Computed tomography (CT) and digital subtractive angiography (DSA) revealed that bleeding was believed to be caused by ruptured aneurysms originating from distal choroidal artery aneurysms. Two patients successfully underwent superficial temporal artery (STA)-middle cerebral artery (MCA) bypass combined with encephalo-duro-myo-synangiosis (EDMS) and the obliteration of the aneurysm. The follow-up DSA or CT scan demonstrated that the aneurysms completely disappeared with the patency of the reconstructed artery. Neither of the patients experienced rebleeding during the follow-up period (up to 34 months). Given conservative treatment, the third patient experienced recurrent hemorrhages 4 months after the first ictus. This study describes treatment for moyamoya disease accompanied with distal choroidal artery aneurysms. Our experience suggests that cerebral revascularization combined with obliteration of the complicated distal aneurysm in the same session is a possible treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23938115 PMCID: PMC3765104 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-11-187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Case 1. (A) Computed tomography (CT) scan showing an intraventricular hemorrhage originating from the left subependymal area. (B), (C), (D) Left internal carotid angiograms revealing severe stenosis of the carotid fork accompanied with moyamoya vessels. There is an aneurysm (arrows) originating from the anterior choroidal artery (B frontal view, C lateral view, D oblique view). (E) Surgical planning with neuronavigation demonstrating the surgical trajectory to the aneurysm. (F), (G) CT scans 34 months after surgery showing the disappearance of the aneurysm and the patency of the bridge vessels (arrows).
Figure 2Case 2. (A) Computed tomography scan showing diffuse intraventricular hemorrhage. (B), (C), (D) Right carotid artery angiograms obtained after the hemorrhage showing marked stenosis of the proximal segment of the middle cerebral artery with a diffuse network of collateral fine vessels. There is an aneurysm (arrows) arising from the left posterior choroidal artery (B frontal view, C oblique view, D lateral view). (E), (F), (G), (H) DSA image at postoperative follow-up showing no residual aneurysm and an enlarged STA.
Figure 3Case 3. (A) Computed tomography scan showing intraventricular hemorrhage involving the left lateral ventricle. (B), (C) DSA demonstrating severe occlusive changes of both intracranial internal carotid arteries. There are two aneurysms (arrows) arising from the distal portion of the bilateral middle cerebral artery. (D) Computed tomography scan showing a recurrent intraventricular hemorrhage.
Clinical data for the reported cases of ruptured distal aneurysms accompanying moyamoya disease
| Kuroda | 60 yrs/F | IVH | Revascularization | Not performed | Good |
| Ali | 26 yrs/M | ICH & IVH | Conventional clipping | True aneurysm | Good |
| Nishio | 47 yrs/F | SAH | Embolization | Not performed | NR |
| Gandhi | 59 yrs/M | SAH | Conventional clipping | Not performed | NR |
| Lévêque | 50 yrs/F | IVH | Endoscopy-assisted surgery | Not performed | NR |
F, Female; ICH, Intracerebral hemorrhage; IVH, Intraventricular hemorrhage; M, Male; NR, Not reported; SAH, Subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Summary of clinical characteristics of three patients with hemorrhagic moyamoya disease accompanied by intracranial aneurysms
| Age (years)/sex | 51/M | 38/M | 42/M |
| Diagnosis | IVH | IVH | IVH |
| Affected artery | Anterior choroidal | Posterior choroidal | Bi-anterior choroidal |
| Suzuki’s vessel grades | III | III | III |
| Preoperative GCS | 15 | 15 | 15 |
| Operation | STA-MCA + EDMS and aneurysm neck clipping | STA-MCA + EDMS and aneurysmectomy | None |
| Postoperative aneurysm | Disappeared | Disappeared | Remains |
| STA-MCA | ++ | ++ | -- |
| EDMS | ++ | ++ | -- |
| Follow-up period (months) | 34 | 21 | 4 |
| Rebleeding | None | None | Yes |
| GOS | 5 | 5 | 5 |
EDMS, Encephalo-duro-myo-synangiosis; F, Female; GCS, Glasgow Coma Score; GOS, Glasgow Outcome Scale; IVH, Intraventricular hemorrhage; M, Male; STA-MCA, Superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery anastomosis; ++, moderate development.