| Literature DB >> 28955510 |
Shigeru Miyachi1, Ryo Hiramatsu2, Hiroyuki Ohnishi3, Ryokichi Yagi2, Toshihiko Kuroiwa2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Conventional coil embolization for large carotid cavernous aneurysms (CCAs) has limited utility due to its inability to prevent recurrences and reduce mass effect. Trapping of the parent artery may have a risk of ischemic complications due to intracranial perfusion disorders. We successfully treated 24 patients with large CCAs using a flow diverter (Pipeline™ embolic device: PED), and this report discusses the safety and efficacy of this method.Entities:
Keywords: Carotid cavernous aneurysm; Endovascular treatment; Flow diverter; Pipeline™ embolic device
Year: 2017 PMID: 28955510 PMCID: PMC5613049 DOI: 10.5469/neuroint.2017.12.2.83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurointervention ISSN: 2093-9043
Summary of cases
| Case No. | Age | Gender | Present symptom | Laterality | Maximum diameter | Multiplicity | Flow diverter | Complication | Delayed complication (temrporary worsening) | Immediate angiographic result | 6 month angiographic result | Mid-term$ clinical result (mRS) | Mid-term$ neurological state |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 40 | Male | VIth N. palsy | R | 29 | single | PED | none showering embolism | Vith N. palsy, ocular pain | BF(E) | CO | 0 | improve |
| 2 | 49 | Female | VIth N. palsy | L | 28 | one of the multiple | PED x5 | (temporary hemiparesis, aphasia) | ocular pain | BF(E) | CO | 1 | no change |
| 3 | 68 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 31 | one of the multiple | PED | none | ophthalmoplegia, ocular pain | BF(E) | CO | 0 | cure |
| 4 | 70 | Female | IIIrd, VIth N. palsy | L | 28 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | no change |
| 5 | 64 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 25 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | improve |
| 6 | 76 | Female | Vith, Vth N. palsy | R | 40 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | NR | 1 | improve |
| 7 | 66 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 19 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | improve |
| 8 | 71 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 17 | one of the multiple | PED | none | none | BF(E) | NR | 1 | improve |
| 9 | 73 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 18 | single | PED | none | Vith N. palsy, ocular pain | BF(E) | CO | 1 | improve |
| 10 | 79 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 16 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | cure |
| 11 | 80 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 20 | single | PED | none | Vith N. palsy | BF(E) | NR | 0 | cure |
| 12 | 80 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 16 | single | PED | none | Vith N. palsy | BF(E) | NR | 1 | improve |
| 13 | 86 | Female | VIth N. palsy | R | 21 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | BF | 1 | improve |
| 14 | 82 | Female | ophthalmoplegia | L | 16 | one of the multiple | PED | none | none | BF(E) | NR | 1 | improve |
| 15 | 66 | Female | IIIrd N. palsy | R | 17 | single | PED* | gingiva bleeding | IIIrd N. palsy | BF(E) | CO | 0 | cure |
| 16 | 64 | Female | IIIrd N. palsy | R | 16 | single | PED* | none | IIIrd N. palsy | CO | CO | 0 | cure |
| 17 | 77 | Female | IIIrd N. palsy | R | 12 | one of the multiple | PED | none | none | BF(E) | NR | 0 | cure |
| 18 | 83 | Female | IIIrd, VIth N. palsy, visual disturbance | L | 21 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | improve |
| 19 | 62 | Female | no symptom | L | 10 | single | PED* x2 | none | none | BF | CO | 0 | free |
| 20 | 70 | Female | no symptom | L | 15 | single | PED* | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | free |
| 21 | 72 | Female | no symptom | R | 13 | single | PED | groin hematoma | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | free |
| 22 | 81 | Female | no symptom | L | 12 | one of the multiple | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | free |
| 23 | 83 | Female | no symptom | R | 10 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | NR | 0 | free |
| 24 | 74 | Female | no symptom | L | 15 | single | PED | none | none | BF(E) | CO | 0 | free |
abbreviations: PED: Pipeline embolic device, CO: complete occlusion, BF: body filling, NR: neck remnant
PED*: classic type
# BF(E): body fiiling with eclipse sign
$ mid-term: 3 to 6 months follow-up
Summary of the Patient and Aneurysm Profile and the Treatment Results
| Total aneurysm number (Patient No.) | 24 (24) | |
|---|---|---|
| Patient profile | ||
| age | mean (range) | 71.5 (40-86) |
| gender | M /F | 1:23 |
| symptom | double vision | 18 |
| visual disturbance | 1 | |
| ocular pain | 1 | |
| other symptoms | 1 | |
| no symptoms | 6 | |
| Aneurysm profile | ||
| side* | R / L | 16:08 |
| max. diameter (mm) | mean (range) | 19.4 (10-40) |
| size | large (10~24 mm) | 18 |
| giant (25 mm≦) | 6 | |
| multiplicity | single | 18 |
| multiple (mirror) | 6 (1) | |
| Treatment summary | ||
| method | flow diverter (single) | 22 |
| flow diverter (telescoping) | 2 | |
| complications | ischemic events (temporary) | 1 |
| ischemic events (permanent) | 0 | |
| hemorrhagic events | 0 | |
| aneurysm rupture | 0 | |
| increased mass effect | 8 | |
| radiological result | complete occlusion (CO) | 1 |
| neck remnant (NR) | 0 | |
| body filling (BF) | 1 | |
| body filling with eclipse sign | 22 | |
| Outcome on 6 months | ||
| neurological state | no deficit (complete recovery) | 12 |
| improve | 10 | |
| no change | 2 | |
| worsen | 0 | |
| mRS | 0 | 17 |
| 1 | 7 | |
| radiological state | complete occlusion (CO) | 16 |
| neck remnant (NR) | 7 | |
| body filling (BF) | 1 | |
| recurrence (retreatment) | 0 | |
Fig. 1A giant aneurysm of complete occlusion (Case No. 1). Right carotid angiogram showed a giant CCA protruding laterally (A, B). After deploying a PED (4.0 × 25 mm), the neck cone-beam CT revealed a marked eclipsed sign (C). Angiogram taken at 6 months showed complete occlusion of the aneurysm (D). MRI demonstrated the shrinkage of the aneurysm (E: right: just after the treatment, left: 6 months follow-up).
Fig. 2A giant aneurysm requiring telescoping stent (Case No. 2). Left carotid angiogram showed a dysplastic, giant CCA without a neck and another tandem aneurysm on the near proximal side (A, B). Five PEDs were connected with partial overlapping to cover the neck of both aneurysms on two stages (C). Post-MRI showed multiple small ischemic lesions (D). Angiogram taken at 6 months showed complete occlusion of the aneurysm (E).
Fig. 3A case of remaining neck (Case No. 11). Right carotid angiogram showed a large CCA (A). PED was successfully deployed (B), and the postoperative angiogram demonstrated a marked eclipse sign (C). The angiogram 6 months later showed that the aneurysm had diminished in size, but a small remnant neck remained (D, E). A follow-up angiogram at 6 months showed the deviation of the body of PED and an original neck remained as the other pathway (D, E).