A newly modified revascularization procedure for vertebrobasilar insufficiency due to midbasilar stenosis is reported. The approach involves anastomosing the superficial temporal artery to a proximal segment of the superior cerebellar artery. The rationale for the procedure and the surgical technique are discussed.
Eight patients were evaluated for severe vertebrobasilar insufficiency (VBI). There were five males and three females, with an average age of 60.2 years (range 42 to 67 years). Three were diabetic and five hypertensive, including two patients who had both diseases. Seven of the eight had ongoing episodes of VBI refractory to anticoagulant and/or antiplatelet agents. Symptoms included two or more of the following in all patients: dizziness, diplopia, hemiparesis, hemihypesthesia, perioral numbness, bilateral visual blurring, dysarthria, and ataxia. Angiography revealed severe atherosclerotic stenosis of the proximal or midsection of the basilar artery in all patients. A 10-cm segment of the anterior or posterior division of the superficial temporal artery (STA) was anastomosed to a proximal segment of the superior cerebellar artery (SCA) through a right subtemporal approach. Seven of eight (87%) postoperative angiograms demonstrated patency as evidenced by filling of the SCA and, in most cases, of the basilar artery. Six of the eight patients were improved or asymptomatic after the operation, one was unchanged, and one died. The average follow-up period was 14 months, with a range of 4 to 23 months. Transient morbidity included temporal lobe swelling in four patients and a subdural hematoma in one. Anastomosis of the STA to the SCA is a feasible therapeutic option in the patient with VBI secondary to stenosis of the proximal or midsection of the basilar artery.
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