Ruptured aneurysm arising from a basilar artery fenestration and associated with a persistent primitive hypoglossal artery

2004 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 532-535 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miyuki Kanematsu ◽  
Koichi Satoh ◽  
Norio Nakajima ◽  
Fusamitsu Hamazaki ◽  
Shinji Nagahiro

✓ A 42-year-old woman experienced the sudden onset of a severe headache. Angiograms demonstrated a persistent primitive hypoglossal artery (PHA) originating from the internal carotid artery at the C-2 vertebral level. In addition, a fenestration at the PHA—basilar artery (BA) junction and an aneurysm at the proximal end of this fenestration were revealed. To perform endovascular embolization of the aneurysm, a microcatheter was introduced into the aneurysm sac via the PHA and two Guglielmi Detachable Coils were placed in the aneurysm. The patient's postoperative course was uneventful, and she was able to resume her normal life. Although many clinical cases have been reported in which a ruptured aneurysm was associated with a PHA or a BA fenestration, as far as the authors know there has been no case in the literature in which a ruptured aneurysm associated with both anomalies and no case in which endovascular embolization was used to treat a ruptured aneurysm associated with a PHA. This rare case is discussed and a review of the relevant literature is presented.

2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Grand ◽  
J. Nepper-Rasmussen

The persistent primitive hypoglossal artery is rare remnant of one of the four embryonal carotid-basilar anastomoses. It is present in 0.02–0.26% of all cerebral angiogram. 14 cases of PHA aneurysms have been reportede in the literature and as far as we know no case in which endovascular embolization was used as a treatment. We present a case with subarachnoid haemorrhage due to aneurysm of persistent primitive hypoglossal artery. The aneurysm was successfully occluded with Guglielmi detachable coils. The SAH resolved and recovery was uneventful.


Medicine ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 100 (32) ◽  
pp. e26904
Author(s):  
Sen He ◽  
Ming-Li Wei ◽  
Fei Xie ◽  
Seidu A. Richard

1981 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 677-680 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcia Katz ◽  
Hugh S. Wisoff ◽  
Robert D. Zimmerman

✓ Unique radiographic and autopsy findings are described in a patient with bilateral basilar artery-middle meningeal artery (BA-MMA) anastomoses associated with a ruptured aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery. The literature, anatomy, and embryology of BA-MMA anastomosis is reviewed.


2002 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 843-850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siamak Asgari ◽  
Arnd Doerfler ◽  
Isabel Wanke ◽  
Beate Schoch ◽  
Michael Forsting ◽  
...  

Object. The authors present a series of patients in whom partially occluded aneurysms were retreated using complementary surgical or endovascular therapy. Methods. During a period of 18 months, 301 patients with intracranial aneurysms were treated using either clip application (171 patients) or endovascular embolization with Guglielmi Detachable Coils ([GDCs] 130 patients). Routine posttreatment angiography studies revealed residual aneurysms in 21 of these patients, nine of whom were retreated using an endovascular or surgical method, with a mean treatment latency of 1.2 months. Four patients underwent primary surgical clip application, whereas five patients experienced GDC packing first. Among patients in the surgical group, the residual aneurysm neck was small and total elimination of the aneurysm was achieved by packing in GDCs. In patients in the endovascular group the authors incompletely packed the aneurysm because of its wide neck or fusiform component in two patients, perforation of a very small aneurysm in one patient, and coil dislocation in another patient. Typical coil compaction occurred in one case. Complete clip application was achieved in all patients. There was no complication in any patient due to the second treatment modality. Final outcome was excellent or good in six and fair in three. Conclusions. Following clip application or endovascular embolization of intracranial aneurysms, the use of complementary surgical or endovascular management is successful and associated with low morbidity.


1997 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 944-949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall T. Higashida ◽  
Wade Smith ◽  
Daryl Gress ◽  
Ross Urwin ◽  
Christopher F. Dowd ◽  
...  

✓ The authors demonstrate the technical feasibility of using intravascular stents in conjunction with electrolytically detachable coils (Guglielmi detachable coils [GDCs]) for treatment of fusiform, broad-based, acutely ruptured intracranial aneurysms and review the literature on endovascular approaches to ruptured aneurysms and cerebral stent placement. A 77-year-old man presented with an acute subarachnoid hemorrhage of the posterior fossa. A fusiform aneurysm with a broad-based neck measuring 12 mm and involving the distal vertebral artery (VA) and proximal third of the basilar artery (BA) was demonstrated on cerebral angiography. The aneurysm was judged to be inoperable. Six days later a repeated hemorrhage occurred. A 15-mm-long intravascular stent was placed across the base of the aneurysm in the BA and expanded to 4 mm to act as a bridging scaffold to create a neck. A microcatheter was then guided through the interstices of the stent into the body and dome of the aneurysm, and GDCs were deposited for occlusion. The arteriogram obtained after stent placement demonstrated occlusion of the main dome and body of the aneurysm. The coils were stably positioned and held in place by the stent across the distal VA and BA fusiform aneurysm. Excellent blood flow to the distal BA and posterior cerebral artery was maintained through the stent. There were no new brainstem ischemic events attributable to the procedure. No rebleeding from the aneurysm had occurred by the 10.5-month follow-up evaluation, and the patient has experienced significant neurological improvement. Certain types of intracranial fusiform aneurysms may now be treated by combining intravascular stent and GDC placement for aneurysm occlusion via an endovascular approach. This is the first known clinical application of this novel approach in a ruptured cerebral aneurysm.


1999 ◽  
Vol 90 (5) ◽  
pp. 843-852 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerhard Bavinzski ◽  
Monika Killer ◽  
Andreas Gruber ◽  
Andrea Reinprecht ◽  
Cordell E. Gross ◽  
...  

Object. The authors retrospectively analyzed the results of their 6-year experience in the treatment of basilar artery (BA) bifurcation aneurysms by using Guglielmi detachable coils (GDCs).Methods. This analysis involved 45 BA tip aneurysms in 16 men and 29 women who ranged in age from 23 to 78 years (mean 50 years). Seventy-five percent of the aneurysms had ruptured and 25% remained unruptured. Of the group whose aneurysms hemorrhaged, 14 patients were Hunt and Hess Grade I or II and 20 were Hunt and Hess Grades III to V; 32 patients were treated within 2 weeks of their subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Initially, treatment with GDCs was limited to poor-grade high-risk patients who refused surgery or patients in whom surgery proved unsuccessful. Later in the study, good-grade patients with narrow-necked aneurysms were also treated using GDCs.The length of clinical follow up ranged from 1 to 72 months (average 27.4 months) in the 37 surviving patients. In 33 of the 45 aneurysms treated with coil placement, good to excellent results were achieved. There were 12 poor results (27%) including one in a patient from the non-SAH group who suffered a thrombotic complication due to an underlying vasculitis. Eight deaths were recorded in this group of 45 patients. One of these deaths was caused by a complication related to anesthesia, one by unknown causes, and six resulted from complications of the disease. One patient rebled on the 2nd day after the endovascular procedure. The mortality and permanent morbidity rates directly related to the intervention were 2.2% and 4.4%, respectively.Angiographic studies obtained immediately postintervention demonstrated 99 to 100% occlusion in 30 (67%) of the aneurysms; nine (20%) were more than 90% occluded; and six (13%) were less than 90% occluded by the GDCs. Follow-up angiograms were obtained in 31 patients between 2 and 72 months after coil placement. Nineteen (61%) of the follow-up angiograms revealed stable results (that is, no change from initial treatment). Twelve of the 31 showed coil compaction, but only eight of these lesions could accept additional coils.In large aneurysms recanalization was seen in 57%, and some of the larger lesions required as many as four embolizations (mean 1.7) to achieve optimal occlusion. When small-necked aneurysms were analyzed as a subset, a stable angiographic result was seen in 92%.Conclusions. Use of GDCs led to excellent clinical and angiographic results in the majority of patients with BA tip aneurysms included in this limited follow-up study. Rebleeding was encountered in one of the 34 previously ruptured BA aneurysms treated with GDCs, and no hemorrhages have been documented in the 11 unruptured aneurysms treated with GDCs in this series. Long-term follow-up studies are necessary before it is possible to compare adequately the treatment of aneurysms with coil placement to the gold standard of aneurysm clipping.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document