Literature DB >> 27427213

Vertebral artery pseudoaneurysms secondary to blunt trauma: Endovascular management by means of neurostents and flow diverters.

José E Cohen1, John M Gomori2, Gustavo Rajz3, Guy Rosenthal4, Hosni Abu El Hassan5, Samuel Moscovici5, Eyal Itshayek5.   

Abstract

Extracranial vertebral pseudoaneurysms that develop following blunt trauma to the cervical area may have a benign course; however, embolic or ischemic stroke and progressive pseudoaneurysm enlargement may occur. We review the presentation and endovascular management of pseudoaneurysms of the cervical vertebral artery (VA) due to blunt trauma in nine patients (eight male, mean age 27years). Pseudoaneurysms occurred in dominant vessels in seven patients and coexisted with segmental narrowing in six. We favored endovascular intervention during the acute phase only in cases with significant narrowing of a dominant VA, especially when anticoagulation was contraindicated. Four patients were treated during the acute stage (contraindication to anticoagulation, mass effect, severely injured dominant VA/impending stroke); five during the chronic phase (pseudoaneurysm growth, ischemic stroke on aspirin prophylaxis, patient preference). Reconstructive techniques were favored over deliberate endovascular occlusion when dominant vessels were involved. Arterial reconstruction was performed in eight of nine patients using a flow-diverter implant (5 patients), stent-assisted coiling (1), overlapping stent implant (1), or implantation of a balloon-expandable stent (1). Deliberate VA occlusion with coils was performed in one of nine patients due to suboptimal expansion of the stented artery after flow-diverter implant. No neurological complications occurred during follow-up. All cases treated by reconstructive techniques showed complete, persistent pseudoaneurysm occlusion and full arterial patency. Endovascular therapy of traumatic VA pseudoaneurysms using neurostents and flow-diverters resulted in occlusion of the pseudoaneurysms, preservation of the parent vessel, and no periprocedural or delayed clinical complications, supporting the feasibility and safety of the approach.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Blunt trauma; Endovascular treatment; Flow diverter stent; Pseudoaneurysm; Stroke; Vertebral artery

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27427213     DOI: 10.1016/j.jocn.2016.03.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Neurosci        ISSN: 0967-5868            Impact factor:   1.961


  3 in total

1.  Spinal Pseudoaneurysms Mimicking an Osteogenic Tumor: A Case Report.

Authors:  Mohammed AlSalman; Sami Aleissa; Ali Alhandi; Raghad AlSayari; Nawaf Alamri; Fahad Alhelal; Majed Abalhkail; Faisal Konbaz
Journal:  J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev       Date:  2020-05

Review 2.  Blunt vertebral vascular injury in trauma patients: ATLS® recommendations and review of current evidence.

Authors:  Roozbeh Shafafy; Sukrit Suresh; John O Afolayan; Alexander R Vaccaro; Jaykar R Panchmatia
Journal:  J Spine Surg       Date:  2017-06

3.  Gastrointestinal Bleeding From a Vertebral Artery Pseudoaneurysm: A Hard-to-Find and Hard-to-Treat Lesion.

Authors:  Miltiadis Krokidis; Michail Karygianis
Journal:  Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol       Date:  2022-02-23       Impact factor: 2.740

  3 in total

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