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Bypass Surgery for the Treatment of Dolichoectatic Basilar Trunk Aneurysms: A Work in Progress
Journal article

Bypass Surgery for the Treatment of Dolichoectatic Basilar Trunk Aneurysms: A Work in Progress

Michael T Lawton, Adib A Abla, W Caleb Rutledge, Arnau Benet, Zsolt Zador, Vitaliy L Rayz, David Saloner and Van V Halbach
Neurosurgery, Vol.79(1), pp.83-99
07/01/2016

Abstract

Adult Aged Atherosclerosis Basilar artery aneurysm Basilar trunk Bioengineering Biomedical Imaging Brain Disorders Bypass Cardiovascular Clinical Research Clinical Sciences Dolichoectasia Female Fusiform aneurysm Giant aneurysm Good Health and Well Being Humans Intracranial Aneurysm Magnetic Resonance Imaging Male Microsurgery Middle Aged Neurology & Neurosurgery Neurosciences Retrospective Studies Revascularization Stroke Surgical Instruments Treatment Outcome Vascular Surgical Procedures Vertebral Artery
BackgroundThe treatment of dolichoectatic basilar trunk aneurysms has been ineffectual or morbid due to nonsaccular morphology, deep location, and involvement of brainstem perforators. Treatment with bypass surgery has been advocated to eliminate malignant hemodynamics and to stabilize aneurysm growth.ObjectiveTo validate that flow alteration with bypass and parent artery occlusion favorably impacts aneurysm progression.MethodsSurgical management evolved in 3 phases, each with different hemodynamic alterations.ResultsDuring a 17-year period, 37 patients with dolichoectatic basilar trunk aneurysms were retrospectively identified, of whom 21 patients were observed, 12 treated immediately, and 4 selected for treatment after clinical progression. In phase 1, flow reversal was overly thrombogenic, despite heparin (N = 5, final mortality, 100%). In phase 2, flow reduction with intracranial-to-intracranial bypass was safer than flow reversal, but did not prevent progressive aneurysm enlargement (N = 3, final mortality 67%). In phase 3, distal clip occlusion of the basilar trunk aneurysm preserved anterograde flow in the aneurysm without rupture, but reduced flow threatened perforator patency, despite treatment with clopidogrel (N = 8, final mortality 62%).ConclusionShifting treatment strategy for dolichoectatic basilar trunk aneurysms improved surgical (80% to 50%) and final mortalities (100% to 62%), with stabilization of aneurysms in the phase 3 survivors. Good outcomes are determined by perforator preservation and mitigating aneurysm thrombosis. Occlusion techniques with increased distal run-off seem to benefit perforators. The treatment of dolichoectatic basilar trunk aneurysms can advance through concentrated management in dedicated centers, concerted efforts to study morphology and hemodynamics with computational methods, and widespread collection of registry data.Abbreviations4D PC-MRI, time-resolved phase-contrast MRIAICA, anterior inferior cerebellar arteryCE-MRA, high-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiographyEC-IC, extracranial-to-intracranial bypassMCA, middle cerebral arteryMR, magnetic resonancemRS, modified Rankin ScalePCA, posterior cerebral arteryPICA, posterior inferior cerebellar arterySCA, superior cerebellar arterySTA, superficial temporal arteryVA, vertebral artery.

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