Background and Purpose-Clinical features of nontraumatic dissecting aneurysms of intracranial carotid circulation remain unclear because investigation of this disease has been limited to case reports. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical features of this disease through the use of cooperatively collected cases. Methods-The cases diagnosed as dissecting aneurysms of intracranial carotid circulation on the basis of clinical signs and neuroradiological findings in 46 stroke centers from 1995 through 1999 were collected, and their clinical features were analyzed. Results-Forty-nine cases of dissecting aneurysms of intracranial carotid circulation were collected. Thirty-two patients presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), and 17 presented with cerebral ischemia. The ratio of this disease to all intracranial dissecting aneurysms treated in the same institutes for the same period was 19.1%, and the ratio of SAH resulting from this disease to SAH of unverified origin treated in the same institutes for the same period was 6.2%. The predominant site of lesion was the internal carotid artery in 18 of 32 patients (56%) with SAH and the anterior cerebral artery in 13 of 17 patients (76%) with cerebral ischemia. The predominant angiographic findings were that stenosis with dilatation occurred in 20 of 32 patients (63%) with SAH and stenosis without dilatation was seen in 11 of 17 patients (65%) with cerebral ischemia. Poor prognosis was seen in 21 of 32 patients (66%) with SAH, which was due largely to rebleeding seen preoperatively, during operation, and even postoperatively when clipping or wrapping of the aneurysmal bulge was performed. Conclusions-Nontraumatic
Postoperatively, the right hemiparesis did not worsen and the patient did not have any new neurological deficits. The right hemiparesis gradually improved after her initial surgery, and she was able to stand by herself at 18 months of age. Adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation were administered. This patient survived for 27 months following birth, which is a relatively long time for glioblastoma cases. Radical removal at the first operation with reliance on the plasticity of infant cerebral function was the key point in the long survival.
Serial changes of anti-platelet-aggregating activity in the endothelial cells after experimental subarachnoid hemorrhage were studied in 30 feline two-hemorrhage models. One hour or 2, 4, 7, or 14 days after mimic subarachnoid hemorrhage, ADP (40 mg/kg) was infused into the basilar artery via the right vertebral artery to activate circulating platelets. Immediately after ADP infusion, the basilar artery was fixed by intra-arterial perfusion with 1.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 mol/L phosphate buffer and was removed. The luminal surface was examined under a scanning electron microscope. One hour after subarachnoid hemorrhage, no platelets adhered or aggregated on the luminal surface. However, 4 to 7 days after subarachnoid hemorrhage, many platelets were observed adhering or aggregating on the luminal surface. These findings suggest the impairment of anti-platelet-aggregating activity of endothelial cells after subarachnoid hemorrhage. This impairment may be involved in inducing cerebral ischemia during cerebral vasospasm by causing platelet adhesion and aggregation.
Middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion was examined with basi-parallel anatomical scanning (BPAS) using three-dimensional fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition (3D-FIESTA), and 3D-FIESTA and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) fusion images were created. We expected that an incidence of hemorrhagic complications due to vessel perforations would be decreased by obtaining vascular information beyond the occlusion and thus acute endovascular revascularization could be performed using such techniques. We performed revascularization for acute MCA occlusion for five patients who were admitted in our hospital from October 2012 to October 2014. Patients consisted of 1 man and 4 women with a mean age of 76.2 years (range: 59–86 years). Fusion images were created from three-dimensional time of flight (3D-TOF) MRA and 3D-FIESTA with phase cycling (3D-FIESTA-C). Then thrombectomy was performed in all the 5 patients. Merci retriever to 1 patient, Penumbra system to 1, urokinase infusion to 2, and Solitaire to 1 using such techniques. In all cases, a 3D-FIESTA-MRA fusion imaging could depict approximately clear vascular information to at least the M3 segment beyond the occlusion. And each acute revascularization was able to perform smoothly using these imaging techniques. In all cases, there was no symptomatic hemorrhagic complication. It showed that 3D-FIESTA MRA fusion imaging technique could obtain vascular information beyond the MCA occlusion. In this study, no symptomatic hemorrhagic complications were detected. It could imply that such techniques were useful not only to improve treatment efficiency but also to reduce the risk of development of hemorrhagic complications caused by vessel perforations in acute revascularization.
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