DM does not increase the risk of perioperative complications and does not influence long-term outcomes after CEA if preexisting vascular risk factors and cardiac diseases are appropriately evaluated and treated before surgery.
Background:
Extracranial carotid artery aneurysms are rare. Surgery may be difficult when vessels are tortuous and on a high cervical level. We report two patients whose tortuous extracranial internal carotid artery (ICA) aneurysm located on a high cervical level was successfully treated by ICA ligation and a high-flow bypass using a radial artery (RA) graft between the external carotid- and the middle cerebral artery.
Case Description:
(Case 1) A 47-year-old man suffered a recurrent cerebral infarct despite medical treatment. His right extracranial ICA aneurysm measured 33 mm; it was tortuous and located at a high cervical level. We ligated the ICA after placing a high-flow bypass using an RA graft. The aneurysm was not repaired. (Case 2) A 59-year-old woman noticed pulsatile swelling on her left neck. It was due to an extracranial ICA aneurysm that was large (36 mm), tortuous, and located at a high cervical level. We performed ICA ligation after placing a high-flow bypass using an RA graft without direct aneurysmal repair. Six months after the operation she noted a pulsatile bulge on the left oropharynx. We confirmed recurrence of an aneurysm from retrograde blood flow and performed internal trapping by occluding the distal portion of the ICA aneurysm using an intravascular procedure.
Conclusion:
ICA ligation after placing a high-flow bypass with an RA-graft is a technically demanding, but safe procedure to address extracranial ICA aneurysms that are tortuous and located at a high cervical level.
Mechanical thrombectomy (MT) is the standard treatment for acute large occlusion of the cerebral artery. Evidence for the success of this procedure was based on the treatment of patients with internal carotid artery and middle cerebral artery thrombi. There are a few reports on thrombi extending to the common carotid artery (CCA). We document our endovascular procedure and the clinical outcome in seven consecutive patients who underwent MT for CCA thrombi between September 2016 and April 2021. Their mean National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 20.0 (range, 9-30), and the mean diffusion-weighted imaging Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomography Score on magnetic resonance images was 8.7 (range, 7-10). In six patients, MT of the CCA occlusion was successful, and the mean puncture-to-reperfusion time was 84 minutes (range, 39-211 minutes). In five patients, successful reperfusion was obtained. The mean total pass number was 4.1 (range, 2-7). Due to large thrombi, we performed balloon guide catheter (BGC) occlusion in three patients. Sheath occlusion occurred in two, and thrombus migration into the femoral artery around the sheath was observed in two patients. The mean modified Rankin Scale score 3 months post-stroke was 3.6 (range, 2-5). When the removal of a large CCA thrombus is attempted in a single step, catheter and sheath occlusion may occur, and this increases the risk for critical systemic artery occlusion. Therefore, we suggest that MT be combined with the BGC technique and propose the use of a large aspiration catheter to decrease the volume of the thrombus.
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