| Literature DB >> 31620443 |
Xiaochun Zhao1, Evgenii Belykh1,2, Claudio Cavallo1, Daniel Valli1, Sirin Gandhi1, Mark C Preul1, Peter Vajkoczy3, Michael T Lawton1, Peter Nakaji1.
Abstract
Background: Fluorescein sodium (FNa) is a fluorescent drug with a long history of use for assessing retinal blood flow in ophthalmology; however, its application in vascular neurosurgery is only now gaining popularity. This review summarizes the current knowledge about using FNa videoangiography in vascular neurosurgery.Entities:
Keywords: aneurysm; arteriovenous fistula; arteriovenous malformation; fluorescein angiography; fluorescein fluorescence; fluorescein sodium; vascular neurosurgery
Year: 2019 PMID: 31620443 PMCID: PMC6759993 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2019.00052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1Graphic demonstrating the contrast and brightness changes during angiography with an (A) intravenous and (B) intraarterial FNa injection. The green color embedded in the bar above the graph represents the flow of the fluorescein. With an intravenous injection, the fluorescein is diluted and contrasts less as shown in the less steep and delayed graph, compared with an intraarterial injection during which the fluorescein is more concentrated and contrasts better as shown by the steep and acute graph. Max, maximum; Min, minimum. Used with permission from Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona.
Figure 2Various platforms used for FNa videoangiography. (A–C) Operating microscope. (A) The operating microscope with Yellow 560 module (ZEISS KINEVO 900, Carl Zeiss AG, Oberkochen, Germany). (B) Intraoperative views of FNa videoangiography (left to right: arterial, capillary, and venous phases). (C) Patented filter combinations used in the operative microscope balances the intensities of narrow bands of excitation and emitted light to create a clear operating field view with yellow fluorescence of fluorescein. The excitation (bottom) and emission (top) profiles of fluorescein (peaks are 485 nm, blue; 514 nm, green, respectively) are shown on the background. The transmittance of filters at various wavelengths results in the uniform intensity of all bands, with a higher intensity of emitted yellow light. (D-H) Pencil-type probe with filter attached to the microscope objective lens. (D) The pencil-type probe with blue LED emission. (E) Sketch demonstrating the intraoperative usage of the probe. (F) The switch of the filter adapted to the operating microscope. (G) The intraoperative view using this device (left, fluorescence off; right, fluorescence on). (H) A diagram showing optical setup of the device. Blue LED light is concentrated around 465 nm, and a long-pass filter (black line) allows green emission light into the camera. (I-K) The laser microscope. (I) The illuminating device. (J) Images of the laser FNa videoangiography (left to right: intraoperative image under white light, capillary phase and venous phases of the FNa videoangiography). (K) Regular excitation (light blue) overlapping the emission (light green) laser light contains light only at 464 nm wavelength and does not interfere with the emission light; thus, the videoangiogram has good contrast. (L–N) An endoscope outfitted for FNa videoangiography. (L) A 2.7-mm straight endoscope is connected to a blue LED light source and a long-pass filter is inserted at the camera attachment. (M) The intraoperative view of endoscopic FNa videoangiography (left to right: under white light, under the blue LED before FNa injection, and after FNa injection). (N) The diagram showing optical setup of the device. Blue LED light is concentrated around 465 nm, and a long-pass filter (black line) allows green emission light into the camera. *, right posterior cerebral artery; **, left posterior cerebral artery; AN, aneurysm; BA, basilar artery; Max, maximum; Min, minimum; SCA, superior cerebellar artery. (A–C,H,K,L,N) are used with permission from Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona. (D–G) Are used with permission from Suzuki et al. (37). (I) is copyright of Sato et al. (38) and made available under Creative Commons. (J) is used with permission from Ito et al. (22). (M) is used with permission from Hashimoto et al. (20).
Comparison of Advantages and Disadvantages of ICG- and FNa-Based Videoangiography.
| Thick vessel wall | Deeper penetration depth; can visualize STA, ICA, VA | Shallow penetration depth; cannot show flow in ICA or VA |
| Small vessels | Harder to visualize | Easier to visualize |
| Repeated IV injections or increased dose | Decreased intensity because of quenching | Can stain vessel wall resulting in false-positive fluorescence |
| Fluorescence detection | Infrared camera only | Eye, camera |
| Display | Always digital signal; separate LCD display or image injection into microscope eyepieces | Viewed through eyepieces or on any display |
| On-the-fly angiography | Requires image overlay; otherwise, need to review ICG video separately from natural light view | Can be in real time |
| View of surgical field | Two-dimensional | Three-dimensional in eyepieces/display |
| Contrast | Very high contrast | Average to high contrast |
FNa, fluorescein sodium; ICA, internal carotid artery; ICG, indocyanine green; STA, superficial temporal artery; VA, vertebral artery.
Summary of clinical application of fluorescein videoangiography in the literature.
| Feinde et al. ( | IA | Stroboscopic light with Wratten 2B filter | 1–2 ml/1% (10–20 mg) | 1 | AVM | Less than 2 s | N/A | First report in the literature |
| Little et al. ( | IA (CCA) | Strobe light with Kodak-Wratten 47A filter | 5 ml/1% (50 mg) | 15 | STA-MCA bypass | 2.4 ± 0.4 s pre-bypass; 0.7 ± 0.3 s post-bypass | N/A | Bypass led to a 1.7 s decrease of the period from injection to arterial phase. |
| Wrobel et al. ( | IV | ILC 302 and Oriel liquid light with Wratten 47A filter | 20 ml/10% (2 g) | 1 | Aneurysm | 30 s | 60 min | 2 g FNa caused long-time vessel wall staining |
| Suzuki et al. ( | IV | A pencil-type probe with a blue LED/ filter attached to microscope | 5 ml/10% (500 mg) | 23 | Aneurysm | 15 s | N/A | The pencil-type probe is an affordable option for FNa videoangiography |
| Kuroda et al. ( | IV and IA | A pencil-type probe with a blue LED filter attached to microscope | IV 5 ml/10% (500 mg); IA 10 ml/0.01–0.02% (1–2 mg) | IV, 5; IA, 13 | Aneurysm | IV, 30 s; IA, immediately | IV, minimally 5 min; IA, 30 s | First study to report the advantage and disadvantage of IV and IA injections |
| Rey-Dios and Cohen-Gadol ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 1 mg/kg | 2 | Aneurysm, 1; AVM, 1 | 20 s | N/A | |
| Ichikawa et al. ( | IA (STA) | OPMI Pentero 900 | 5 ml/0.5–1% | 10 | Aneurysm | Immediately | Less than 1 min | 3 F catheter inserted 5–10 cm into the STA |
| Lane and Cohen-Gadol ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 75 mg | 4 | AVM | 10–15 s | N/A | FNa videoangiography has the “real-time inspection” feature which is valuable in AVM surgery |
| Lane et al. ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 75 mg | 22 | Aneurysm | 20 s | 20–30 min | Prospective comparison of FNa and ICG |
| Misra et al. ( | IV | N/A | 1.5 mg/kg | 1 | DAVF | 11 s | N/A | First case report of use with a spinal AVM |
| Hashimoto et al. ( | IV and IA | Olympus endoscope with long-pass filter; blue LED at the light source | IV 5 ml/10% (500 mg); IA 10 ml/0.01–0.02% (1–2 mg) | IV, 5; IA, 13 | Aneurysm | IV, 30 s; IA, immediately | IV, N/A; IA 30 s | Endoscope can offer more information such as neck remnant and perforators preservation |
| Kakucs et al. ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 5 ml/10% (500 mg) | 10 | Aneurysm | 15 s | N/A | |
| Matano et al. ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 250 mg | 23 | Aneurysm 18; bypass, 5 | NA | N/A | Comparison of ICG and FNa in vascular surgery |
| Ito et al. ( | IV | M500 OHS1 Laser microscope | 2.5 ml/10% (250 mg) | 1 | Aneurysm | 20 s | N/A | A novel laser microscope examining fluorescein angiography |
| Narducci et al. ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 500 mg | 11 | Bypass | 15–20 s | 20–25 min | |
| Serrano-Rubio et al. ( | IV | OPMI Pentero 900 | 75 mg | 12 | AVM | 11.6 s | N/A |
AVM, arteriovenous malformation; CCA, common carotid artery; DAVF, dural arteriovenous fistula; FNa, fluorescein sodium; IA, intraarterial; ICG, indocyanine green; IV, intravenous; LED, light-emitting diode; MCA, middle cerebral artery; N/A, not applicable; STA, superficial temporal artery.