Article : Endovascular treatment of distal posterior inferior cerebellar artery aneurysms

Jun   Tang,  Linjie   Wei,  Lin   Li,  Yin   Niu,  Qianwei   Chen,  Hua   Feng,  Gang   Zhu,  Zhi   Chen


ABSTRACT
 
Objectives: To assess the feasibility and results of endovascular treatment for ruptured distal posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) aneurysms. 
 
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed our experience and results with endovascular treatments for a series of 13 consecutive patients with ruptured distal PICA aneurysms at the Southwest Hospital, Chongqing, China, treated between June 2011 and January 2015. Therapeutic considerations, intraoperative complications, and results were evaluated. 
 
Results: Endovascular embolization was performed in all 13 patients including selective coiling (4), stentassisted coiling (2), microcatheter-assisted coiling (1), coiling without adjunctive techniques (1), and parent artery occlusion (5). Planed stent deployment failure occurred in one patients resulting from marked stenosis at the origin of the PICA; the patient`s existing partial Wallenberg`s syndrome became worse after treatment. Another 2 patients treated with parent artery occlusion recovered well without developing obvious neurological deficits, although a small cerebellar infarction of the distal PICA was observed. No patient experienced post procedural hemorrhage during the follow-up period (8-46 months; mean, 26.8 months).
 
Conclusions: Distal PICA aneurysms can be managed effectively with various endovascular methods. Protective strategies using a stent or microcatheter for preserving the patency of the proximal PICA segment are a viable treatment option in reducing the potential risk of brain stem ischemia in selected patients.


Original article link (http://www.neurosciencesjournal.org/_cgi-bin/DetailArticle.asp?ArticleId=12102)

Neurosciences

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