The possibility of delayed abducens nerve palsy should be kept in mind, especially in the patients who were treated with transvenous coil packing in the posterior part of the cavernous sinus. Furthermore, our results suggest that long-term follow-up care is important for these patients, even after complete neurological and radiological recovery was attained.
Patients with severe carotid artery stenosis exhibited mild decline in cognitive function, which was improved after CEA and CAS. RBANS is a suitable test battery for this type of patient.
This study was aimed to analyze the outer diameter of the involved arteries in moyamoya disease, using three-dimensional (3D) constructive interference in steady state (CISS) and direct surgical inspection. Radiological evaluation was performed in 64 patients with moyamoya disease. As the controls, six patients with severe middle cerebral artery (MCA) stenosis and 17 healthy subjects were also recruited. On 3D-CISS, the outer diameter was quantified in the supraclinoid portion of internal carotid artery (C1), the horizontal portions of MCA (M1) and anterior cerebral artery (A1), and basilar artery. The involved carotid fork was directly observed during surgery in another series of three adult patients with moyamoya disease. In 53 adult patients with moyamoya disease, the outer diameters of C1, M1, and A1 segments were 2.3 ± 0.7 mm, 1.3 ± 0.5 mm, and 1.0 ± 0.4 mm in the involved side (n = 91), being significantly smaller than the control (n = 17), severe M1 stenosis (n = 6), and non-involved side in moyamoya disease (n = 15, P < 0.01). There were significant correlations between Suzuki’s angiographical stage and the outer diameters of C1, M1, and A1 (P < 0.001). The laterality ratio of C1 and M1 was significantly smaller in unilateral moyamoya disease (n = 20) than the controls and severe MCA stenosis (P < 0.01). Direct observations revealed a marked decrease in the outer diameter of the carotid fork (n = 3). These findings strongly suggest specific shrinkage of the involved arteries in moyamoya disease, which may provide essential information to distinguish moyamoya disease from other intracranial arterial stenosis and shed light on the etiology and novel diagnosis cue of moyamoya disease.
The marked dilatation of PChoA and PcomA is considered a powerful predictive marker of hemorrhage in MMD. Collateral channels spontaneously shift from the anterior to posterior circulation in Japanese patients during ageing but not in European Caucasian patients. These different dilation patterns of the collateral pathway may be associated with an ethnic difference of the clinical onset type in MMD.
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