scholarly journals VICTORIA: VIrtual neck Curve and True Ostium Reconstruction of Intracranial Aneurysms

Author(s):  
Philipp Berg ◽  
Benjamin Behrendt ◽  
Samuel Voß ◽  
Oliver Beuing ◽  
Belal Neyazi ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose For the status evaluation of intracranial aneurysms (IAs), morphological and hemodynamic parameters can provide valuable information. For their extraction, a separation of the aneurysm sac from its parent vessel is required that yields the neck curve and the ostium. However, manual and subjective neck curve and ostium definitions might lead to inaccurate IA assessments. Methods The research project VICTORIA was initiated, allowing users to interactively define the neck curve of five segmented IA models using a web application. The submitted results were qualitatively and quantitatively compared to identify the minimum, median and maximum aneurysm surface area. Finally, image-based blood flow simulations were carried out to assess the effect of variable neck curve definitions on relevant flow- and shear-related parameters. Results In total, 55 participants (20 physicians) from 18 countries participated in VICTORIA. For relatively simple aneurysms, a good agreement with respect to the neck curve definition was found. However, differences among the participants increased with increasing complexity of the aneurysm. Furthermore, it was observed that the majority of participants excluded any small arteries occurring in the vicinity of an aneurysm. This can lead to non-negligible deviations among the flow- and shear-related parameters, which need to be carefully evaluated, if quantitative analysis is desired. Finally, no differences between participants with medical and non-medical background could be observed. Conclusions VICTORIAs findings reveal the complexity of aneurysm neck curve definition, especially for bifurcation aneurysms. Standardization appears to be mandatory for future sac-vessel-separations. For hemodynamic simulations a careful neck curve definition is crucial to avoid inaccuracies during the quantitative flow analysis.

2008 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 1230-1240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas R. Marotta ◽  
Thorsteinn Gunnarsson ◽  
Ian Penn ◽  
Donald R. Ricci ◽  
Ian Mcdougall ◽  
...  

Object The authors describe a novel device for the endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms, the endovascular clip system (eCLIPs). Descriptions of the device and its delivery system as well as the results of flow model tests and the treatment of experimental aneurysms are provided. Methods The eCLIPs comprises a flexible hybrid implantable device (an anchor and a covered leaf) and a balloon catheter delivery system, designed to be positioned and activated in the parent vessel in such a way that the covered portion will abut the aneurysm neck. The eCLIPs was subjected to testing in glass, elastomeric, and cadaveric flow models to determine its navigability, orientation, and activation compared with commercially available stents. In a second experiment, 8 carotid artery sidewall aneurysms in swine were treated using eCLIPs. The degree of occlusion was observed on angiography immediately following and 30 days after device activation, and a histological analysis was performed at 30 days. Results The device could navigate tortuous glass models and human cadaveric vessels. Compared with commercially available stents, the eCLIPs performed well. It could be navigated, oriented, and activated easily and reliably. With regard to the 8 porcine experimental aneurysms, immediate postactivation angiograms confirmed complete occlusion of 4 lesions and near occlusion of the other 4. Angiographic follow-up at 30 days postactivation showed occlusion of all 8 aneurysms and patency of all parent vessels. Histopathological analysis revealed aneurysm healing, with smooth-muscle cells growing across the lesion neck to allow reendothelialization. Conclusions Aneurysm occlusion with a single extrasaccular endovascular device has potential advantages. The authors believe that eCLIPs may prove to be a useful tool in the endovascular treatment of cerebral aneurysms. The system should reduce risks associated with coiling, procedure time, costs, and radiation exposure. The device satisfactorily occluded 8 experimental sidewall aneurysms. The observed healing pattern is similar to that seen after microsurgical clipping.


1989 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 512-519 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall T. Higashida ◽  
Van V. Halbach ◽  
Leslie D. Cahan ◽  
Grant B. Hieshima ◽  
Yoshifumi Konishi

✓ Treatment of complex and surgically difficult intracranial aneurysms of the posterior circulation is now being performed with intravascular detachable balloon embolization techniques. The procedure is carried out under local anesthesia from a transfemoral arterial approach, which allows continuous neurological monitoring. Under fluoroscopic guidance, the balloon is propelled by blood flow through the intracranial circulation and, in most cases, can be guided directly into the aneurysm, thus preserving the parent vessel. If an aneurysm neck is not present, test occlusion of the parent vessel is performed and, if tolerated, the balloon is detached. Twenty-six aneurysms in 25 patients have been treated by this technique. The aneurysms have involved the distal vertebral artery (five cases), the mid-basilar artery (six cases), the distal basilar artery (11 cases), and the posterior cerebral artery (four cases). The aneurysms varied in size and included three small (< 12 mm), 15 large (12 to 25 mm), and eight giant (> 25 mm). Fifteen patients (60%) presented with hemorrhage and 10 patients (40%) with mass effect. In 17 cases (65%) direct balloon embolization of the aneurysm was achieved with preservation of the parent artery. In nine cases (35%), because of aneurysm location and size, occlusion of the parent vessel was performed. Complications from therapy included three cases of transient cerebral ischemia which resolved, three cases of stroke, and five deaths due to immediate or delayed aneurysm rupture. The follow-up period has ranged from 2 months to 43 months (mean 22.5 months). In cases where posterior circulation aneurysms have been difficult to treat by conventional neurosurgical techniques, intravascular detachable balloon embolization may offer an alternative therapeutic option.


2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.F. Layton ◽  
H.J. Cloft ◽  
D.F. Kallmes

Perforation of intracranial aneurysms during endovascular treatment with platinum micro-coils is a well-known and serious complication reported to occur in 2–4% of patients. Inflation of a remodelling balloon across the aneurysm neck or within the proximal parent vessel is an additional technique that theoretically might be useful to reduce flow within the aneurysm and achieve hemostasis. In the case reports that follow, we present our experience using this technique for managing intraprocedural aneurysm rupture.


2020 ◽  
Vol 133 (6) ◽  
pp. 1756-1765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Visish M. Srinivasan ◽  
Aditya Srivatsan ◽  
Alejandro M. Spiotta ◽  
Benjamin K. Hendricks ◽  
Andrew F. Ducruet ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVETraditionally, stent-assisted coiling and balloon remodeling have been the primary endovascular treatments for wide-necked intracranial aneurysms with complex morphologies. PulseRider is an aneurysm neck reconstruction device that provides parent vessel protection for aneurysm coiling. The objective of this study was to report early postmarket results with the PulseRider device.METHODSThis study was a prospective registry of patients treated with PulseRider at 13 American neurointerventional centers following FDA approval of this device. Data collected included clinical presentation, aneurysm characteristics, treatment details, and perioperative events. Follow-up data included degree of aneurysm occlusion and delayed (> 30 days after the procedure) complications.RESULTSA total of 54 aneurysms were treated, with the same number of PulseRider devices, across 13 centers. Fourteen cases were in off-label locations (7 anterior communicating artery, 6 middle cerebral artery, and 1 A1 segment anterior cerebral artery aneurysms). The average dome/neck ratio was 1.2. Technical success was achieved in 52 cases (96.2%). Major complications included the following: 3 procedure-related posterior cerebral artery strokes, a device-related intraoperative aneurysm rupture, and a delayed device thrombosis. Immediately postoperative Raymond-Roy occlusion classification (RROC) class 1 was achieved in 21 cases (40.3%), class 2 in 15 (28.8%), and class 3 in 16 cases (30.7%). Additional devices were used in 3 aneurysms. For those patients with 3- or 6-month angiographic follow-up (28 patients), 18 aneurysms (64.2%) were RROC class 1 and 8 (28.5%) were RROC class 2.CONCLUSIONSPulseRider is being used in both on- and off-label cases following FDA approval. The clinical and radiographic outcomes are comparable in real-world experience to the outcomes observed in earlier studies. Further experience is needed with the device to determine its role in the neurointerventionalist’s armamentarium, especially with regard to its off-label use.


2005 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sepehr Sani ◽  
Kirk W. Jobe ◽  
Demetrius K. Lopes

Object Until recently, wide-necked aneurysms were not considered amenable to treatment with coil embolization. The recent introduction of intracranial stents has provided a method of preventing coil migration out of wide-necked aneurysms. The Neuroform2 Treo is a modification of the Neuroform stent; the new version has a higher metal/artery ratio. The authors' initial experience with the use of this stent in combination with coil embolization to treat wide-necked intracranial aneurysms is reported and technical considerations are discussed. Methods The authors' first 10 consecutive patients with wide-necked intracranial aneurysms were included in this study. Inclusion criteria restricted the group to adult patients with wide-necked intracranial aneurysms (ruptured and unruptured lesions). A wide neck was defined as a dome/neck ratio of less than 2 or a neck that was 4 mm or wider as measured on angiograms. Immediate postprocedure angiography studies were performed to determine successful coil occlusion of the aneurysm as well as patency of the parent vessel. Six-month follow-up angiograms were obtained in all patients. Ten aneurysms with poor dome/neck ratios (< 2) were studied in 10 patients. In all cases the stent was delivered to the aneurysm site and positioned without difficulty. No branch artery compromise was observed. A technical difficulty occurred in one case, with prolapse of a coil into the parent vessel, which was successfully corrected with no adverse clinical effects. There were no clinical or neurological complications associated with endovascular treatment of aneurysms in this series. One patient required further coil embolization because of findings on the 6-month follow-up cerebral angiogram. Conclusions The Neuroform2 Treo navigates similarly to the Neuroform2, with the advantage of increased aneurysm neck coverage. This feature may lower the retreatment rates for wide-necked cerebral aneurysms.


1998 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. E5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Lanzino ◽  
Ajay K. Wakhloo ◽  
Richard D. Fessler ◽  
Robert A. Mericle ◽  
Lee R. Guterman ◽  
...  

Results of previous in vitro and in vivo experimental studies have suggested that the placement of a porous stent within the parent artery across the aneurysm neck may hemodynamically uncouple the aneurysm from the parent vessel, leading to thrombosis of the aneurysm. For complex wide-necked aneurysms, a stent may also aid the packing of the aneurysm with Guglielmi detachable coils (GDCs) by acting as a rigid scaffold that prevents coil herniation into the parent vessel. Recently, improved stent system delivery technology has allowed access to the tortuous vascular segments of the intracranial system. The authors report here the intracranial stenting of aneurysms involving different segments of the internal carotid artery (ICA) and the vertebral artery (VA). Four patients with intracranial aneurysms located at the petrous, cavernous, and paraclinoid segments of the ICA and at the VA proximal to the origin of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery, respectively, were treated since January 1998. In three of these patients, stent placement across the aneurysm neck was followed by GDC placement, accomplished via a microcatheter through stent mesh. In one patient, the aneurysm was treated solely by stenting. No periprocedural complications were observed, and at follow up, no patient was found to have suffered symptoms referable to aneurysm growth or thromboembolic complications. More than 90% occlusion of the aneurysm was achieved in the three cases treated by stenting and GDC placement. One of these patients underwent 6-month follow-up angiography that did not reveal any in-stent stenosis. In the case treated solely by stent placement, no evidence of aneurysm thrombosis was observed either immediately postprocedure or on follow-up angiography performed 24 hours later. A new generation of flexible stents can be used to treat intracranial aneurysms in difficult-to-access areas such as the proximal intracranial segments of the ICA or the VA. The stent allows tight coil packing even in the presence of a wide-necked, irregularly shaped aneurysm and may provide an endoluminal matrix for endothelial growth. Although convincing experimental evidence suggests that stent placement across the aneurysm neck may by itself promote intraluminal thrombosis, the role of this phenomenon in clinical practice may be limited at present by the high porosity of currently available stents.


Author(s):  
Sunil Appanaboyina ◽  
Fernando Mut ◽  
Rainald Löhner ◽  
Christopher M. Putman ◽  
Juan R. Cebral

Intracranial aneurysms are pathological dilations of the arteries in the brain, whose rupture is often fatal. Surgery and endovascular embolization are the two most common methods of treatment. Surgery involves opening a portion of the skull and placing metallic clips at the aneurysm neck thereby preventing blood flow into the aneurysm. In the case of embolization, a catheter is used to pack platinum coils in the aneurysm reducing the inflow and promoting thrombus formation. Due to its less invasive approach endovascular embolization is preferred over surgery. Nevertheless this approach also has some serious aftereffects. Coil compaction followed by the re-growth or the formation of the secondary aneurysm is the most common problem. The endovascular embolization approach also has a serious shortcoming that the coils alone cannot be used to block every type of aneurysm. Wide neck or fusiform aneurysms are coiled with the help of stents. Recent studies show that stent, which is a hollow cylindrical mesh, can be successfully used to limit the flow of blood into the aneurysm. However these studies have been conducted using idealized in-vitro and numerical models. Studies conducted using patient-specific models generated from medical images will provide a more realistic approach to computationally investigate the effects of stents on intra-aneurysmal flow patterns. However generation of computational grids inside the parent vessel and around these stents is a challenging task. In this paper an algorithm to map the stent to a patient-specific vascular model and an adaptive unstructured embedded gridding technique to model flow around stents are presented. Finally these techniques are demonstrated on patient-specific cases to prove their feasibility.


Stroke ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 44 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D Brown ◽  
James C Torner ◽  
Ana W Capuano ◽  
Madhavan L Raghavan ◽  
J Mocco ◽  
...  

Introduction: There is ongoing debate regarding the rupture risk of an unruptured intracranial aneurysm (UIA), and the predictors of rupture. Hypothesis: There are aneurysm morphology characteristics which predict rupture in patients with an UIA. The purpose of this analysis was to assess for such characteristics utilizing the International Study of Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms (ISUIA) cohort. Methods: Patients were entered prospectively at 61 centers. Patients must have had at least one UIA, which may or may not have been symptomatic. Patients were followed for a median of 9 years and all potential hemorrhages were carefully adjudicated. A case-control design was used. The cases were 57 patients with aneurysmal rupture during followup for whom detailed radiology data were available from arteriography. Controls were 198 size- (+/- 2 mm maximum diameter) and location- (parent artery) matched patients without rupture during followup. Numerous aneurysm morphology characteristics were assessed on arteriogram review. Multivariable condition logistic regression modeling was performed. Results: A total of 57 cases and 198 controls were included. Most (76%) of the 255 cases were women, and 20% had a prior history of SAH from some other aneurysm. There were no differences between cases and controls in aneurysm maximum diameter, aneurysm location, patient age, gender, reason for presentation, or prior medical history. Multivariate analysis identified that only perpendicular height of the aneurysm--the measurement of the aneurysm height at a perpendicular to the center of the aneurysm neck to the aneurysm dome-was an independent predictor of aneurysm rupture. Aspect ratio, size ratio, parent vessel diameter, presence of daughter sac, and aneurysm angle were not independent predictors of rupture. Conclusions: After controlling for aneurysm size and location, the aneurysm perpendicular height remained a predictor of UIA rupture during long-term followup. The assessment of perpendicular height may be helpful in clinical practice, in addition to the other key predictors of UIA rupture, aneurysm maximum diameter and location. Further investigation into the use of perpendicular height as a predictor of rupture in patients with UIA is indicated.


2002 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Henkes ◽  
A. Bose ◽  
S. Felber ◽  
E. Miloslavski ◽  
E. Berg-Dammer ◽  
...  

Endovascular treatment of wide neck intracranial aneurysms is technically difficult and leads to less favorable treatment results and long term outcome. We participated in a multicenter prospective study to evaluate the safety and performance of a new self-expandable nitinol micro stent (Neuroform) in stent assisted coil occlusion of wide neck intracranial aneurysms. Eighteen patients were enrolled in the study in a single center. The anatomy of the target aneurysm and the parent vessel, technical details of the procedure, device functionality, anatomic and clinical results were evaluated. All enrolled aneurysms were either wide necked or showed an unfavorable neck-to-fundus ratio. In 16 out of 18 patients the Neuroform device allowed stent assisted coil occlusion of the aneurysm. The occlusion rate was 95% in eight patients and 100% in eight patients. The two failures were both due to anatomic reasons. Flexibility of the stent, behavior during deployment and subsequent ability to retain coils within the aneurysmal sac were considered as good as or better than the properties of previous balloon expandable stents. No device-related adverse events were encountered. Procedure-related clinical complications occurred in seven patients but caused no severe permanent neurological deficit. The Neuroform neurovascular stenting system is a safe and effective adjunct for the stent-assisted coil occlusion of wide necked intracranial aneurysms. The major advantages of this device are its self-expanding property and very high flexibility which allows safe navigation, easy sizing, as well as accurate positioning of the stent while providing sufficient bridging of the aneurysm neck for subsequent coil placement.


2010 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. ons-ons ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Gruber ◽  
Christopher S. Ogilvy ◽  
Erik F. Hauck ◽  
Elad I. Levy ◽  
L. Nelson Hopkins ◽  
...  

Abstract OBJECTIVE: Endovascular treatment of large intracranial aneurysms arising from a fenestrated parent vessel may prove particularly difficult. We present a case of a large, broad-based aneurysm arising from a proximal basilar artery (BA) fenestration treated with the wafflecone technique. Technical nuances and indications for this treatment option are reviewed. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 38-year-old man presented with headache, blurred vision, and dizziness. Angiography demonstrated an 11 × 14-mm BA aneurysm associated with the proximal portion of a BA fenestration. TECHNIQUE: A 28 × 4.5-mm Enterprise stent was placed from the right vertebral artery directly into the aneurysm. The stent tines were allowed to flare out in the aneurysm neck creating the “waffle cone.” The aneurysm was then coiled with a series of Presidio coils. CONCLUSION: Use of the waffle-cone technique for stent placement resulted in nearly complete embolization of the aneurysm, retention of the entire coil mass in the dome, and preservation of flow through both vertebral arteries and both limbs of the fenestration.


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