151. Interventional neuroradiological techniques for the treatment of aneurysms of the supra-aortic extracranial arteries.
- Author
-
Taha MM, Nakahara I, Higashi T, Iwamuro Y, Watanabe Y, and Taki W
- Subjects
- Aged, Aneurysm surgery, Angiography instrumentation, Arteries pathology, Brachiocephalic Trunk diagnostic imaging, Brachiocephalic Trunk surgery, Carotid Artery, Common diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Common surgery, Carotid Artery, Internal diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Internal surgery, Embolization, Therapeutic methods, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuroradiography instrumentation, Stents, Subclavian Artery diagnostic imaging, Subclavian Artery surgery, Treatment Outcome, Aneurysm diagnostic imaging, Angiography methods, Arteries surgery, Neuroradiography methods, Radiography, Interventional methods
- Abstract
Aneurysms in the supra-aortic extracranial arteries are rare in neurovascular pathology. Conventional surgery is effective but technically demanding and successful endovascular repair is reported. We treated 5 patients with supra-aortic extracranial artery aneurysms at our hospital (mean age 53.8 years). There were 2 aneurysms of the common carotid artery, 1 of the extracranial internal carotid artery, 1 of the subclavian artery, and 1 located at the innominate artery. Four patients were symptomatic. The lesion was the result of trauma in 3 patients. The procedure was conducted using bare stent placement and coil embolization of the aneurysm in 2 patients, covered stent in 2 patients, and bare stent only in 1 patient. No periprocedural complications occurred. Follow-up angiography revealed asymptomatic stent thrombosis in a patient treated using a covered stent, but the remaining 4 patients showed successful treatment of the aneurysms with the parent arteries remaining patent. Follow-up clinical assessment ranged between 30 and 81 months. The patient with stent thrombosis died of unrelated pathology; the remaining patients did not experience aneurysm recurrence, hemorrhage, or distal thromboembolism.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF