TY - JOUR
T1 - Distal access to wide-necked aneurysms—‘Around the World’ technique
T2 - 2-dimensional operative video
AU - Endovascular Neurosurgery Research Group (ENRG)
AU - Ringer, Andrew J.
AU - Arthur, Adam
AU - Bain, Mark
AU - Bendock, Bernard
AU - Binning, Mandy Jo
AU - Boulos, Alan S.
AU - Crowley, Webster
AU - Fessler, Richard
AU - Grande, Andrew
AU - Guterman, Lee
AU - Hanel, Ricardo
AU - Hoit, Daniel
AU - Hopkins, L. Nelson
AU - Howington, Jay
AU - James, Robert
AU - Jankowitz, Brian
AU - Kan, Peter
AU - Khalessi, Alex A.
AU - Kim, Louis
AU - Langer, David
AU - Lanzino, Giuseppe
AU - Levitt, Michael
AU - Levy, Elad
AU - Lopes, Demetrius
AU - Mack, William
AU - Mericle, Robert
AU - Mocco, J.
AU - Ogilvy, Chris
AU - Pandey, Aditya
AU - Replogle, Robert
AU - Riina, Howard
AU - Rodriguez, Rafael
AU - Saugaveau, Eric
AU - Schirmer, Clemens
AU - Siddiqui, Adnan
AU - Spiotta, Alex
AU - Sultan, Ali
AU - Tawk, Rabih
AU - Thomas, Ajith
AU - Turner, Raymond
AU - Veznedaroglu, Erol
AU - Welch, Babu
AU - White, Jonathan
PY - 2020/12/15
Y1 - 2020/12/15
N2 - Wide-necked aneurysms often pose challenges for distal access to the distal vasculature. This 64-yr-old woman without neurological deficits presented with atypical headaches of gradual onset. MRI revealed a large, symptomatic, unruptured carotid terminus aneurysm incorporating the origin of both the middle (MCA) and anterior cerebral arteries (ACA). Its wide neck created significant risks to coil prolapse and parent vessel compromise, risking stroke. With other options of higher risks, we recommended an around-the-world technique. Standard transfemoral access was used to the right internal carotid artery (ICA) with a 6F-Shuttle sheath and intracranial carotid with a 6F-Sofia distal access catheter. With dual-microcatheter access, 1 catheter was placed in the aneurysm dome, a second in the MCA for stent placement. Advancing the wire around the aneurysm first formed a loop from the lateral to medial wall for access to the MCA. The microcatheter was then advanced around the wire into the MCA, keeping the loop within the dome. With the loop's distal tip anchored, the distal end of the stent was deployed and anchored into the MCA. Both pitfalls (ie, lack of sufficient distal access, collapse of stent device during deployment) were resolved using a balloon catheter. With the balloon positioned and inflated as the anchor, the wire and catheter were pulled together. The loop in the aneurysm's dome straightened out across the neck, the stent was advanced into the MCA, and coiling proceeded. A large neck remnant had partially closed on 6-mo follow-up angiogram. Patient consented to undergo the procedure. Illustrations in video published/printed with permission from Mayfield Clinic.
AB - Wide-necked aneurysms often pose challenges for distal access to the distal vasculature. This 64-yr-old woman without neurological deficits presented with atypical headaches of gradual onset. MRI revealed a large, symptomatic, unruptured carotid terminus aneurysm incorporating the origin of both the middle (MCA) and anterior cerebral arteries (ACA). Its wide neck created significant risks to coil prolapse and parent vessel compromise, risking stroke. With other options of higher risks, we recommended an around-the-world technique. Standard transfemoral access was used to the right internal carotid artery (ICA) with a 6F-Shuttle sheath and intracranial carotid with a 6F-Sofia distal access catheter. With dual-microcatheter access, 1 catheter was placed in the aneurysm dome, a second in the MCA for stent placement. Advancing the wire around the aneurysm first formed a loop from the lateral to medial wall for access to the MCA. The microcatheter was then advanced around the wire into the MCA, keeping the loop within the dome. With the loop's distal tip anchored, the distal end of the stent was deployed and anchored into the MCA. Both pitfalls (ie, lack of sufficient distal access, collapse of stent device during deployment) were resolved using a balloon catheter. With the balloon positioned and inflated as the anchor, the wire and catheter were pulled together. The loop in the aneurysm's dome straightened out across the neck, the stent was advanced into the MCA, and coiling proceeded. A large neck remnant had partially closed on 6-mo follow-up angiogram. Patient consented to undergo the procedure. Illustrations in video published/printed with permission from Mayfield Clinic.
KW - Carotid terminus aneurysm
KW - Endovascular treatment
KW - Intracranial aneurysm
KW - Microcatheter
KW - Stent
KW - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
KW - Carotid Artery, Internal/diagnostic imaging
KW - Humans
KW - Female
KW - Intracranial Aneurysm/diagnostic imaging
KW - Neck
KW - Stents
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85098476393&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/ons/opaa369
DO - 10.1093/ons/opaa369
M3 - Article
C2 - 33316816
AN - SCOPUS:85098476393
SN - 2332-4252
VL - 20
SP - E39-E40
JO - Operative Neurosurgery
JF - Operative Neurosurgery
IS - 1
ER -