Cases reported "Intracranial Aneurysm"

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1/500. Radical surgery of a giant Galen's vein aneurysm using total circulatory arrest: case report.

    BACKGROUND: arteriovenous malformations of Galen's vein are a rare type of vascular anomaly. The complex anatomy of these lesions creates an extremely difficult management dilemma. We report successful surgical treatment of a 7-year-old patient with a Galen's vein aneurysm. methods AND RESULTS: A 7-year-old patient with slowly progressing gait disturbance, emotional instability, and strange behaviour is presented. A computed tomography scan revealed a high-density mass in the pineal region and cerebral angiography showed an aneurysm of Galen's vein. We decided to perform surgical excision of the aneurysm. The operation was performed under hypothermic circulatory arrest with barbiturate cerebral protection. The patient had no signs of postoperative ischemic deficits, hemorrhage, or neurologic deterioration. CONCLUSIONS: Various techniques have been described for the obliteration of Galen's vein aneurysms, including direct surgical approach, staged operation, and transarterial, transvenous or transtorcular embolization. We present this patient to illustrate the use of hypothermic circulatory arrest and barbiturate cerebral protection for successful surgical excision of this complex vascular lesion. The combination of these techniques allowed us, in this case, to operate with reasonable safety on otherwise, difficult to treat aneurysm of Galen's vein.
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2/500. Large and giant middle to lower basilar trunk aneurysms treated by surgical and interventional neuroradiological methods.

    Treatment of large and giant aneurysms of the basilar artery remains difficult and controversial. Three large or giant aneurysms of the lower basilar artery were treated with a combination of surgical and interventional neuroradiological procedures. All patients underwent the balloon occlusion test with hypotensive challenge (blood pressure reduced to 70% of the control value). The third patient did not tolerate the test. In the first patient, both vertebral arteries were occluded through a craniotomy. In the second patient, both the aneurysm and the basilar artery were occluded by detached balloons. In the third patient, one vertebral artery was occluded by surgical clipping and the other by detached helical coils and fiber coils. In spite of anti-coagulation and anti-platelet therapy, postoperative thrombotic or embolic ischemia occurred in the second and third patients. Fibrinolytic therapy promptly corrected the ischemic symptoms, but the second patient developed hemorrhagic complications at the craniotomy area 2 hours later. At follow-up examination, the first patient had only 8th cranial nerve paresis, the second patient who had a hemorrhagic complication was bed-ridden, and the third patient had no deficit. Interventional occlusion requires a longer segment of the parent artery compared to surgical occlusion of the parent artery and might cause occlusion of the perforating arteries. However, selected use of various coils can occlude only a short segment of the parent artery. Thus, the postoperative management of thromboembolic ischemia after the occlusion of the parent artery is easier using the interventional technique.
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3/500. rupture mechanism of a thrombosed slow-growing giant aneurysm of the vertebral artery--case report.

    A 76-year-old male developed left hemiparesis in July 1991. The diagnosis was thrombosed giant vertebral artery aneurysm. He showed progressive symptoms and signs of brainstem compression, but refused surgery and was followed up without treatment. He died of rupture of the aneurysm and underwent autopsy in March 1995. Histological examination of the aneurysm revealed fresh clot in the aneurysmal lumen, old thrombus surrounding the aneurysmal lumen, and more recent hemorrhage between the old thrombus and the inner aneurysmal wall. The most important histological feature was the many clefts containing fresh blood clots in the old thrombus near the wall of the distal neck. These clefts were not lined with endothelial cells, and seemed to connect the lumen of the parent artery with the most peripheral fresh hemorrhage. However, the diameter of each of these clefts is apparently not large enough to transmit the blood pressure of the parent artery. Simple dissection of the aneurysmal wall by blood flow in the lumen through many clefts in the old thrombus of the distal neck may be involved in the growth and rupture of thrombosed giant aneurysms of the vertebral artery.
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4/500. A giant dissecting aneurysm mimicking serpentine aneurysm angiographically. Case report and review of the literature.

    Intracranial dissecting and giant serpentine aneurysms are rare vascular anomalies. Their precise cause has not yet been completely clarified, and the radiological appearance of such lesions can be different in each case according to the effect of hemodynamic stress on a pathologic vessel wall. For berry aneurysms, available evidence overwhelmingly favors their causation by hemodynamically induced degenerative vascular disease and there is an obvious need to determine the hemodynamic parameters most likely to induce the precursor atrophic lesions. In this study, a case of a giant dissecting aneurysm angiographically mimicking serpentine aneurysm of the right ophthalmic artery is reported and the relevant literature is reviewed to investigate the pathological characteristics and pathogenesis of this lesion. In the present case, radiological investigation of the lesion suggested a serpentine aneurysm, but the diagnosis was corrected to dissecting aneurysm subsequent to the pathological examination of the resected aneurysm. A giant dissecting aneurysm angiographically mimicking serpentine aneurysm and developing as the result of a circumferential dissection located between the internal elastic lamina and media is of particular interest when the etiology of these aneurysms is considered. To our knowledge this is the first report on intracranial dissecting aneurysm mimicking serpentine aneurysm angiographically. Our case illustrates the importance of careful serial section studies for a better understanding of the vascular pathology underlying the processes involved in intracranial serpentine aneurysms. We conclude that serpentine, dissecting and berry aneurysms may all arise by way of similar pathophysiological mechanisms.
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ranking = 1.75
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5/500. Giant fusiform aneurysm of the middle cerebral artery: successful Hunterian ligation without distal bypass.

    Giant fusiform aneurysm is a rare vascular lesion which presents difficult management issues. We describe one such aneurysm in a middle cerebral artery branch (M2) that presented with subarachnoid haemorrhage and was managed operatively. Clinical, radiological and pathological presentations, as well as the different treatment options for this type of aneurysm are discussed based on a literature review. A satisfactory results in an M2 giant fusiform aneurysm can be achieved with Hunterian ligation of the parent vessel even when a distal EC-IC bypass is not possible.
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6/500. Profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest with skull base approaches for treatment of complex posterior circulation aneurysms.

    OBJECTIVE: cardiopulmonary bypass with profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest has seen a resurgence as an adjunct technique in neurological surgery. We report our experience with this technique in treating seven complex vertebro-basilar aneurysms. methods: skull base approaches were used in all cases, providing excellent exposure and minimizing brain retraction. There were six basilar artery aneurysms and one giant fusiform vertebro-basilar artery aneurysm. All aneurysms but one had an apparent neck, which could be clipped. The fusiform vertebro-basilar artery aneurysm was trapped, partially resected, and the circulation was reestablished with a saphenous vein graft from the cervical internal carotid artery to the mid-basilar artery. RESULTS: Five patients had an excellent outcome and two had a good outcome at one year or at latest follow up. Two of the patients showed improvement of neurological deficits which were present before the surgical intervention. CONCLUSION: Applying very strict selection criteria in this small series of patients with posterior circulation aneurysms, excellent or good results were achieved using the profound hypothermic circulatory arrest technique.
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7/500. Compression of the visual pathway by anterior cerebral artery aneurysm.

    Visual failure is an uncommon presenting symptom of an intracranial aneurysm. It is even more uncommon in aneurysms arising from the anterior cerebral artery (ACA). We presented 2 patients with an aneurysm of the A1 segment of the anterior cerebral artery causing visual field defects. One patient presented with a complete homonymous hemianopia due to compression of the optic tract by a giant aneurysm of the proximal left A1 segment. The second patient had an almost complete unilateral anopia caused by compression of the optic nerve and chiasm by an aneurysm of the distal part of the A1 segment with a small chiasmatic hemorrhage and ventricular rupture.
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8/500. The use of cardiopulmonary bypass with profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest during the surgical treatment of giant intracranial aneurysms.

    The surgical treatment of giant intracranial aneurysms can be aided by using cardiopulmonary bypass to provide hypotension under hypothermic conditions. Cardiopulmonary techniques need to be modified to deal with the problems that arise during this type of neurosurgery.
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ranking = 1.25
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9/500. Does the tuberous sclerosis complex include intracranial aneurysms? A case report with a review of the literature.

    BACKGROUND: tuberous sclerosis is a protean, genetically determined disease that may involve any organ or tissue and lead to a great number of symptoms and clinical features. OBJECTIVE: diagnosis can be very difficult in cases with incomplete manifestations (formes fruste) lacking the classic signs of the disease. MATERIALS AND methods: We report a case fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for tuberous sclerosis (shagreen patches, hypomelanotic macules, renal cysts and angiomyolipomas, and "migration tracts" in the cerebral white matter) in association with a giant intracranial aneurysm, but lacking mental retardation, epilepsy and facial angiofibroma. RESULTS: Fourteen other cases of tuberous sclerosis and intracranial aneurysms, all but one without any clear sign of polycystic kidney disease, were found in the literature. CONCLUSION: We suggest that vascular dysplasias in general and aneurysms (mainly intracranial) in particular can be added to the other non-primary diagnostic features for the clinical diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis.
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10/500. Recanalization and rupture of a giant vertebral artery aneurysm after hunterian ligation: case report.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Recanalization and subsequent rupture of giant aneurysms of the posterior circulation after Hunterian ligation is an extremely rare event that has been noted to occur with basilar apex, basilar trunk, and vertebrobasilar junction aneurysms. We report the case of a giant, previously unruptured right vertebral artery aneurysm, which recanalized from the contralateral vertebral artery and subsequently ruptured after previously performed angiography showed complete thrombosis of the aneurysm. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 72-year-old woman presented with headaches, ataxia, and lower extremity weakness. A giant 3-cm right vertebral artery aneurysm was found during the patient evaluation. INTERVENTION: Because of the size of the aneurysm and the absence of a discrete neck, Hunterian ligation was performed. After treatment, angiograms showed no filling of the aneurysm from either the right or left vertebral artery. Nine days later, after the patient developed lethargy and nausea, repeat angiography showed that a small portion of the aneurysmal base had recanalized. The next day, the patient had a massive subarachnoid hemorrhage and subsequently died. CONCLUSION: We think that this is a previously undescribed complication associated with direct arterial ligation of giant vertebral artery aneurysms. patients with aneurysms treated using Hunterian ligation need to be followed up closely. Even aneurysms that have minimal recanalization are at risk for subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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