Aneurysms located at the distal portion of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) are rare, and their clinical features are not fully understood. We report the clinical features and management of 30 distal PICA aneurysms in 28 patients treated during the past decade at Kagoshima University Hospital and affiliated hospitals. Our series includes 20 women and eight men. Of their 30 aneurysms, 24 were ruptured, and six were unruptured; there were 27 saccular and two fusiform aneurysms; one was dissecting. Their location was at the anterior-medullary (n = 4), lateral-medullary (n = 9), tonsillomedullary (n = 7), telovelotonsillar (n = 6), and cortical (n = 4) segment of the PICA. In 18 patients, angiographic features suggested hemodynamic stress including an absent contralateral PICA or ipsilateral anterior inferior cerebellar artery, termination of the vertebral artery (VA) at the PICA, and hyperplasia or occlusion of the contralateral VA. As three patients died before surgery, 27 aneurysms in 25 patients were surgically treated. Of these, 6 were unruptured aneurysms; 20 were clipped via midline or lateral suboccipital craniotomy, and 5 were embolized with Guglielmi coils; in one, the PICA flow was reconstructed by OA-PICA anastomosis, and in the other one, the PICA was resected. Of the 25 surgically treated patients, 22 (88%) had good outcomes. The predominant contributor to the development of distal PICA aneurysms is thought to be increased hemodynamic stress attributable to anomalies in the PICA and related posterior circulation. Both direct clipping and coil embolization yielded favorable outcomes in our series. However, considering the difficulties that may be encountered at direct clipping in the acute stage and the availability of advanced techniques and instrumentation, aneurysmal coiling is now the first option to address these aneurysms.
Polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) is a rare systemic necrotizing arteritis that involves small- and medium-sized arteries in various organs. Although aneurysm formation in visceral arteries is a typical finding in PAN, intracranial aneurysms are much less common, and only a few cases of aneurysm rupture associated with this disease have been documented. In this paper, the authors report on a ruptured PAN aneurysm of the anterior cerebral artery; the lesion was trapped and resected. On histological examination, extensive fibrinoid necrosis and an inflammatory infiltration of leukocytes were seen in the aneurysm wall. To the authors' knowledge this is the first report of subarachnoid hemorrhage from a histologically confirmed PAN aneurysm.
Keyhole surgery is partly replacing the standard pterional approach in patients undergoing surgery to treat aneurysms of the anterior circulation. We describe the pterional keyhole approach for the clipping of anterior circulation aneurysms and discuss the efficacy and safety of our keyhole craniotomy procedure. We treated 103 patients with 111 intracranial aneurysms by surgical clipping via the pterional keyhole approach and retrospectively compared the characteristics and clinical outcomes of the keyhole procedure and the standard pterional approach. We also compared the surgical results of the keyhole approach when the operator was an experienced neurosurgeon or a less experienced neurosurgeon guided by an experienced colleague. All keyhole operations were carried out successfully without enlargement of the craniotomy or a change to a different approach. The outcomes of the keyhole and the standard pterional approach in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage were not significantly different. Favorable outcomes were obtained in patients with unruptured aneurysms treated by either experienced or less experienced surgeons. The pterional keyhole approach offers the same surgical possibilities as conventional pterional approaches for the treatment of anterior circulation aneurysms. It is safe and simple and yields favorable outcomes even if the operators are less experienced neurosurgeons. Careful patient selection and sufficient opening of the sylvian fissure are the key points for good outcomes and the prevention of intraoperative complications.
The efficacy and safety of cerebellar hemorrhage evacuation by key hole craniotomy and the importance of thorough evacuation and irrigation of the hematoma in the fourth ventricle to resolve obstructive hydrocephalus were assessed in 23 patients with spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage (SCH) greater than 3 cm or with brainstem compression and hydrocephalus. A 5-cm elongated S-shaped scalp incision was made, and a 3-cm key hole craniotomy was performed over a cerebellar convexity area. The hematoma was immediately evacuated through a small corticotomy. The hematoma in the fourth ventricle was gently removed through the hematoma cavity, followed by thorough saline irrigation to release obstructive hydrocephalus. Patients classified retrospectively into favorable and poor outcome groups using the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) scores of 4-5 vs. 1-3 showed significant differences with respect to the preoperative Glasgow Coma Scale, hematoma size and volume, and brainstem compression. Only 2 of the 23 patients required ventricular drainage and no postoperative complications were recorded. Patients treated by experienced and inexperienced surgeons showed no significant differences in the hematoma evacuation rate, postoperative GOS, and interval from skin incision to start of hematoma evacuation. Our simplified method of key hole craniotomy to treat SCH was less invasive but easy to perform, as even inexperienced neurosurgeons could obtain good surgical results. Thorough cleaning of the fourth ventricle minimized the necessity for ventricular drainage.
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