| Literature DB >> 32377472 |
Dallas L Sheinberg1, Marie-Christine Brunet1, Stephanie H Chen1, Evan Luther1, Robert M Starke1.
Abstract
A carotid-cavernous fistula (CCF) is an abnormal connection between the arteries and veins of the cavernous sinus. Iatrogenic CCFs have been described as potential complications following aneurysm coiling, balloon angioplasty, and transsphenoidal surgery. In this case report, we describe a rare case of an iatrogenic direct CCF following mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for acute ischemic stroke. A 78-year-old female presented to an outside hospital with a new onset of right-sided weakness and aphasia and underwent emergency MT for a left middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. The procedure was complicated by iatrogenic injury to the left cavernous internal carotid artery (ICA), which resulted in a direct high-flow CCF. The patient was transferred to our hospital and the fistula was closed with transarterial coils. Ten days later, she returned with diplopia and cranial nerve VI palsy due to residual pseudoaneurysm and was treated with a flow-diverting stent. On follow-up, the patient was neurologically intact and imaging showed no residual fistula. As the frequency of MTs performed for acute ischemic stroke continues to rise, neurointerventionalists should be aware of this potential rare complication and be prepared to manage patients who develop symptomatic CCF.Entities:
Keywords: carotid cavernous fistula; ccf; complications; endovascular; stroke; thrombectomy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32377472 PMCID: PMC7198104 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.7524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Diagnostic cerebral angiogram and transarterial embolization of the left CCF
(A) AP and (B) lateral view of left ICA injection demonstrating direct/high-flow left CCF (arrow). The images show venous drainage into bilateral cavernous sinus, left superior ophthalmic vein, and left pterygopalatine plexus; (C) balloon test occlusion of left ICA with TransForm balloon of 4 x 10-mm and injection from right ICA. The image shows venous delay in left hemisphere of 1.8 seconds; (D) supra-selective catheterization of the fistula point and distal left superior ophthalmic vein with synchro soft microwire and headway duo microcatheter; (E) AP and (F) lateral view of left ICA injection after coiling showing residual CCF draining into a posterior venous pouch, bilateral cavernous sinus, and left pterygopalatine plexus (arrow). The images show neither ophthalmic venous drainage nor cortical venous drainage
AP: anteroposterior; ICA: internal carotid artery; CCF: carotid-cavernous fistula
Figure 2Angiogram of left ICA before pipeline treatment; pipeline deployment; and left ICA injection after pipeline treatment
(A) Follow-up angiogram of left ICA 10 days later with no residual left CCF (arrow). The image shows no early vein or venous pouch opacification. However, it shows residual pseudoaneurysm neck of left cavernous ICA at the previous shunting point location. (B) Pipeline deployment in left cavernous ICA covering pseudoaneurysm. (C) Final AP and (D) lateral view of left ICA injection after pipeline treatment (arrow)
AP: anteroposterior; ICA: internal carotid artery; CCF: carotid-cavernous fistula
Literature review of iatrogenic direct CCF following mechanical thrombectomy
ICA: internal carotid artery; MCA: middle cerebral artery; M1: MCA segment 1; CN VI: cranial nerve six; CCF: carotid-cavernous fistula; NA: not available
| Literature review of iatrogenic direct CCF following mechanical thrombectomy | ||||||
| Author | Alan et al. [ | Akpinar et al. [ | Matsumoto et al. [ | Current study | ||
| Case 1 | Case 2 | Case 3 | ||||
| Site of occlusion | Tandem right ICA terminus and MCA | Left ICA terminus to left M1 | Right ICA (petrous, lacerum, proximal cavernous segment), proximal right M1 | Right distal ICA and right MCA | Right M1 | Left MCA |
| Number of passes | 1 | 2 | 1 | NA | 1 | 2 |
| Procedure | Stent retriever thrombectomy with local aspiration; stenting of cervical carotid | Stent retriever thrombectomy with local aspiration | Stenting of the cervical/cavernous/lacerum carotid; manual aspiration thrombectomy | Stent retriever thrombectomy with local aspiration | Stent retriever thrombectomy | Stent retriever thrombectomy with local aspiration |
| Initial CCF symptoms | Asymptomatic | Asymptomatic | Right CN VI palsy, proptosis, chemosis (asymptomatic after 2 weeks) | NA | Chemosis, hyperemia | Asymptomatic |
| Management of CCF | Conservative | Conservative | Embolization via transvenous inferior ophthalmic vein approach (after initial conservative management) | Conservative (ICA was not recanalized) | Embolization via transvenous inferior petrosal sinus approach (three weeks post- thrombectomy) | Embolization via transarterial approach to superior ophthalmic vein; 10 days later, pipeline embolization of residual pseudoaneurysm |
| Follow-up | 1.5 years: asymptomatic | 4 months: asymptomatic | 2.5 years: asymptomatic | Died 2 days postoperatively | 3 months: asymptomatic | 6 months: asymptomatic |