| Literature DB >> 26389011 |
Jong Won Lee1, Jung Min Woo2, Ok Kyun Lim2, Ye-Eun Jo2, Jae Kyun Kim3, Eun Sang Kim4, Deok Hee Lee5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Hypothesizing that the parent artery (PA) diameter of the aneurysm-neck segment is larger than those of normal segments, especially in wide-necked aneurysm cases, we conducted 3D angiographic analyses in wide-necked aneurysm cases focusing on the luminal morphologic change of the PA.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebral aneurysms; Cerebral angiography; Intracranial stenting; Parent artery; Vascular morphology
Year: 2015 PMID: 26389011 PMCID: PMC4571558 DOI: 10.5469/neuroint.2015.10.2.82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurointervention ISSN: 2093-9043
Fig. 1Angiography was performed in a patient with an incidental aneurysm. (A) Volume rendering (VR) image of the 3D angiography showing a lobulated, wide-necked aneurysm at the ophthalmic segment of the right internal carotid artery. (B) A drawing in transparent view demonstrates the ostium of the wide-necked aneurysm and associated segmental distention of the parent artery lumen as well. (C) A self-expanding stent is placed across the neck of the aneurysm. We exaggerated the malapposition problem in this particular picture. We may improve the apposition by choosing a larger-diameter stent to fit into the enlarged segment. (D) However, due to the size limitation in the diameter and intrinsic tortuosity of the parent artery, there could be significant malapposition, even with significant oversizing of the stent.
Fig. 2Angiography was performed in a patient with an incidental aneurysm. (A) Volume rendering image of the 3D angiography showing a small but wide-necked right paraophthalmic ICA aneurysm. The parent artery diameter decreases gradually from the proximal to the distal segments. (B) After segmentation of the aneurysm sac from the parent artery lumen, the centerline (pink line) appears automatically following indication of the beginning and finishing points on the workstation. We can trace the parent artery lumen along the centerline (pink line) and obtain the mean and maximum diameter of the parent artery lumen at each point (P1-P6). We designated six points as described in the method section. (C) The software automatically generates the summary of the measurement, including the aneurysm and parent artery.
Fig. 3Bar-and-whisker graphs of maximum (A) and mean diameters of the parent artery (B) from the most proximal point (P1) to the most distal point (P6) of the parent artery segment. Significant diameter changes are noted between P4 and P5 in both graphs.
Summary of the Aneurysms and Their Parent Artery Segments and Uni- and Multi-variate Analyses of Possible Influencing Morphologic Factors to Changes in Parent Artery Diameter
| Parameter (units) | Median | Range | Univariate analysis (p values) | Multivariate analysis (p values) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aneurysm sac | Volume (mm3) | 51.6 | 14.4-406.6 | 0.486 | |
| Maximum diameter (mm) | 4.3 | 2.9-9.0 | 0.318 | ||
| Aneurysm ostium | Maximum distance (mm) | 5.2 | 3.8-8.2 | 0.090 | 0.485 |
| Minimum distance (mm) | 4.2 | 2.8-7.4 | 0.027 | 0.123 | |
| Ratio | Dome-to-neck ratio | 0.9 | 0.7-1.6 | 0.646 | |
| Aspect ratio | 0.9 | 0.6-1.5 | 0.870 | ||
| Parent artery segment | Centerline distance (mm) | 15.9 | 13.2-19.7 | 0.739 | |
| Direct distance (mm) | 9.0 | 5.4-11.4 | 0.732 | ||
| Tortuosity index | 1.8 | 1.4-2.9 | 0.537 |