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Comparison of Intraoperative Indocyanine Green Videoangiography vs Postoperative Catheter Angiography to Confirm Microsurgical Occlusion of Spinal Dorsal Intradural Arteriovenous Fistulas
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Comparison of Intraoperative Indocyanine Green Videoangiography vs Postoperative Catheter Angiography to Confirm Microsurgical Occlusion of Spinal Dorsal Intradural Arteriovenous Fistulas

Katherine Karahalios, Visish M Srinivasan, Lea Scherschinski, Joseph D DiDomenico, Joshua S Catapano, Michael M Safaee and Michael T Lawton
Operative neurosurgery (Hagerstown, Md.), Vol.23(3), pp.206-211
09/2022
PMID: 35972083

Abstract

Angiography, Digital Subtraction - methods Arteriovenous Fistula - diagnostic imaging Arteriovenous Fistula - surgery Catheters Humans Indocyanine Green Male Middle Aged Retrospective Studies
Dorsal intradural arteriovenous fistulas (DI-AVFs) represent 80% of spinal AVFs. Microsurgical clip occlusion is a durable treatment that uses preoperative and postoperative digital subtraction angiography (DSA) as standard practice. Intraoperative indocyanine green videoangiography (ICG-VA) is a valuable intraoperative adjunct in these cases. Intraoperative ICG-VA findings have not been compared with postoperative DSA findings. To assess the diagnostic value of intraoperative ICG-VA vs postoperative DSA for spinal DI-AVFs. A multi-institutional database of vascular malformations was queried for all surgically managed cases of DI-AVF. Patients with both intraoperative ICG-VA and postoperative DSA were included. Demographic and radiologic data, intraoperative findings, and surgical outcomes data were retrospectively analyzed. Forty-five patients with DI-AVF were identified (male sex, 32; mean age, 61.9 [range, 26-85] years). All DI-AVFs were treated with interruption of the fistula with clip occlusion of the draining vein. Intraoperative ICG-VA showed complete obliteration in all patients. Postoperative DSA was performed for 40 patients and confirmed complete obliteration in all patients. The negative predictive value of ICG-VA confirming complete occlusion of the DI-AVFs was 100%. Eighteen patients (47%) experienced clinical improvement, and 16 (42%) experienced no change in condition. ICG-VA is useful for intraoperative identification of DI-AVFs and confirmation of complete microsurgical occlusion. Correlation between intraoperative ICG-VA and postoperative DSA findings demonstrates the diagnostic power of ICG-VA. This finding suggests that postoperative DSA is unnecessary when intraoperative ICG-VA confirms complete occlusion of the DI-AVF, which will spare patients the procedural risk and cost of this invasive procedure.

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