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Case Reports
Coil Occlusion of Right M2 Fusiform Aneurysm After Balloon-Test Occlusion: 2-Dimensional Video.
- Michael K Tso, Rimal Hanif Dossani, Muhammad Waqas, Gary B Rajah, Kunal Vakharia, and Adnan H Siddiqui.
- Department of Neurosurgery, University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo, New York, USA; Department of Neurosurgery, Gates Vascular Institute at Kaleida Health, Buffalo, New York, USA. Electronic address: michael.k.tso@gmail.com.
- World Neurosurg. 2021 Feb 1; 146: 45.
AbstractWe present a 73-year-old man with an incidental right M2 fusiform aneurysm demonstrating growth on serial noninvasive imaging over 5 years (Video 1). After multidisciplinary conference review, the decision was to proceed with intracranial balloon-test occlusion (BTO) followed by coil occlusion if the patient passed this test or by trap and bypass if the patient failed this test. With the patient under moderate conscious sedation, a transfemoral 8F approach was used with positioning of a TracStar 95-cm 088 guide catheter (Imperative Care, Campbell, California, USA) into the distal right cervical ICA. We positioned a Scepter 4-mm × 10-mm compliant dual-lumen balloon microcatheter (MicroVention, Alisa Viejo, California, USA) into the proximal M2. The patient passed the 30-minute BTO including a 15-minute hypotensive challenge with nitroprusside infusion. Our goal was to occlude the aneurysm from distal to proximal for precise thrombosis. A Phenom 17 150-cm microcatheter (Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) separate from the Scepter balloon microcatheter was positioned in the distal portion of the aneurysm. Coil occlusion was successfully performed with an assortment of complex and helical coils. Sluggish anterograde flow was seen distal to the aneurysm with prominent retrograde filling of the distal right MCA territory via pial collaterals from the right PCA. The patient tolerated the procedure well and was discharged the following day neurologically intact. Six-month follow-up diagnostic angiogram confirmed complete occlusion of the aneurysm. This is the first published video using the elegant approach of intracranial BTO followed by coil occlusion for an intracranial fusiform aneurysm using a dual-lumen balloon microcatheter.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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