| Literature DB >> 32026177 |
Julian Maingard1,2,3, Anthony Lamanna4, Hong Kuan Kok5,6, Dinesh Ranatunga4, Rajeev Ravi4, Ronil V Chandra7,8, Michael J Lee9,10, Duncan Mark Brooks4,11,5,12, Hamed Asadi4,11,5,7,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Flow diverting stents have been used safely and effectively for the treatment of intracranial aneurysms, particularly for large and wide necked aneurysms that are not amenable to conventional endovascular treatment with coiling. The Surpass Streamline device (Stryker Neurovascular, MI, USA) is a relatively new and unique flow diverting stent which maintains constant device mesh density over varying vessel diameters. This may potentially provide advantages compared to other flow diverting stents in achieving aneurysmal occlusion. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Aneurysm; Endovascular; Flow diverting stent; Hepatic artery; Renal artery; Surpass; Visceral artery
Year: 2019 PMID: 32026177 PMCID: PMC7224242 DOI: 10.1186/s42155-019-0057-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CVIR Endovasc ISSN: 2520-8934
Fig. 1a) and b) the Surpass Streamline flow diverter delivery system
Fig. 2a) 2.4 cm Heavily calcified hepatic artery / gastroduodenal artery aneurysm (large arrgow). Common hepatic (small arrow) and gastroduodenal arteries (arrowheads). b) Angiography performed via a Cobra-2 catheter (arrow) demonstrating a wide neck unsuitable for conventional coil embolization c). An 088 Neuronmax (arrow) was advanced beyond the origin of the aneurysm. d) 5Fr Sofia catheter (arrow) acted as the intermediate catheter. The Neuronmax was retracted to the proximal aneurysm neck (arrowheads). e to g) Retraction of the Surpass delivery system (arrowheads with distal and proximal radio opaque markers) over a wire (arrow in e) into the Neuronmax (large arrow) resulting in adequate deployment of the Surpass stent (arrows in f). h) Final angiogram demonstrates stent patency and reduced aneurysm flow and stagnation (arrowheads). Note the ghost image of the calcified aneurysm rim after subtraction (arrow)
O’Kelly-Marotta grading scale used to assess the degree of angiographic filling and contrast stasis when using flow diverter stents to treat aneurysms
| Stasis Phase | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1: no stasis (arterial phase clearance prior to capillary phase) | 2: moderate stasis (arterial phase clearance prior to venous phase) | 3: significant stasis (persistent contrast at venous phase) | ||
| Aneurysm Filling | A: total filling (> 95%) | A1 | A2 | A3 |
| B: subtotal filling (5–95%) | B1 | B2 | B3 | |
| C: entry remnant (1–5%) | C1 | C2 | C3 | |
| D: no filling (0%) | D | N/A | N/A | |
Fig. 3DSA during treatment of a left anterior and inferior segmental renal artery aneurysm. a) 1.9 cm wide necked segmental renal artery aneurysm (arrow) felt to be inappropriate for coil embolization. Note the 088 Neuronmax catheter. b) Deployed Surpass Streamline flow diverter (arrowheads) with some expected residual aneurysm flow. c) a 4 × 20 mm Armada balloon was used to improve stent apposition with the proximal and distal vessel wall landing zones and to ensure exclusion of the aneurysm neck given the origin of the aneurysm from an outer convexity. d) post treatment angiogram with minimal aneurysm flow and preserved end organ perfusion
Fig. 48-week CTA follow up. a) and b) Coronal maximum intensity projection (MIP) CTA demonstrating patency of the Surpass Streamline flow diverting stent (arrowheads) and preservation of flow into the distal gastroduodenal artery (arrow). Note complete thrombosis of the aneurysm with no residual neck (black arrows)
Fig. 53-week follow up CTA. a) coronal MIP CTA and corresponding 3D volume rendered imaging demonstrating complete thrombosis and occlusion of the aneurysm without end organ or stent complication