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Endovascular Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms PDF

257 Pages·1998·6.92 MB·English
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Endovascular Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York Barcelona Budapest Hong Kong London Milan Paris Santa Clara Singapore Tokyo J.V. Byrne· G. Guglielmi Endovascular Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms Foreword by Charles G. Drake With 98 Illustrations in 188 Parts Springer Dr. James V. Byrne, MD, FRCS, FRCR Radcliffe Infirmary Woodstock Road Oxford 0X2 6HE, GB Guido Guglielmi, MD Professor Division of Interventional Neuroradiology U.C.L.A. Medical Centre Los Angeles, CA 90095-1721, USA ISBN-13: 978-3-642-80383-3 e-ISBN-13: 978-3-642-80381-9 001: 10.1007/978-3-642-80381-9 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Byrne, J. v. (James V.), 1950-. Endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms I J. V. Byrne, G. Guglielmi. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Intracranial aneurysms - Endoscopic surgery. l. Guglielmi, G. (Guido), 1948-. II. Title. [DNl.M: 1. Cerebral Aneurysm - therapy. 2. Cerebral Aneu rysm - diagnosis. 3. Embolization, Therapeutic - methods. WL 355 B995e 19981. RD594.2.B95 1998. 617.4'81-dc21. DNLMIDLC for Library of Congress. 97-28768 CIP This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, re printing, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on mi- cromm or in any other way, and storage in data banks. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Ger man Copyright Law of September 9, 1965, in its current version, and permis sion for use must always be obtained from Springer-Verlag. Violations are liable for prosecution under the German Copyright Law. © Springer-Verlag Berlin· Heidelberg 1998 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1s t edition 1998 The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. Product liability: The publishers cannot guarantee the accuracy of any infor mation about the application of operative techniques and medications con tained in this book. In every individual case the user must check such information by consulting the relevant literature. Cover design: Anna Deus, Heidelberg Typesetting: K+ V Fotosatz, Beerfelden SPIN 10523000 21/3135-5 4 3 2 1 0 - Printed on acid-free paper Dedication To Nella, Marta, Silvia, To my brother, Nick Byrne and Juliet, Rowena, Tom, George, and Henry Foreword This is the story of endovascular treatment of brain aneu rysms whose recent rapid evolution from detachable bal loons to packing with detachable coils is extraordinary. It prompted a look back over 40 years of my attempts, and those of others, to find the ideal safe treatment of intra cranial aneurysms by surgical ( extravascular) means, which for me came to an end with retirement in 1992 and experience with over 4000 aneurysms. Although carotid occlusion had been used even in the last century, intracranial surgery for aneurysm, while be ginning in the 1930s, was not widely attempted until after WWII. Those operations done early after bleeding using only small unremovable silver clips or ligatures resulted in high morbidity. Then with the safety of delayed opera tion there was appalling loss of life with rebleeding while waiting, and measures to prevent early rebleeding were only modestly successful. That many postoperative cata strophes were associated with vasospasm was not recog nized until the early 1960s, and even today this phenom enon remains a major cause of morbidity. Surgeons concentrated on techniques to dissect a slack aneurysm from its branches and perforators and prevent inadvertent rupture using varying degrees of systemic hy potension and even hypothermia for a time. Only gradu ally did operative morbidity decline in these trying early years, until micro neurosurgery began. Magnified vision first with loupes in the 1960s and then under the surgical microscope in the 1970s provided a new operative world for the surgeon, revealing the most intimate details of thee origin and relations of the aneurysm to its neighbour- hood of nervous structures and vessels. (c Aneurysm clip design improved rapidly with remova ble spring clips of many sizes and shapes. The fenestrated clip solved the problem of the bulbous neck and could be used in tandem or in parallel to occlude even the widest aneurysm necks. After 1980, the use of gentle temporary VIII Foreword clipping of the parent vessel came into wider use so that the surgeon had a slack or even collapsed aneurysm with which to deal. Coupled with new microsurgical tools most aneurysm necks could be clipped with exquisite accuracy. Today in experienced hands most nongiant aneurysms in good condition patients can be obliterated with morbid ities under 10% even on the basilar circulation. The first use of an endovascular embolus may have been that of Brooks of Nashville, who in 1931 introduced a long thin strip of muscle into the carotid artery for treatment of a CC fistula; the patient had a good result but a blind eye. Russian surgeons later used a muscle embolus tethered with a suture so that it could be retrieved if the bruit per sisted or weakness resulted. In the excellent historical re view herein, it is evident that it was not until 1974 when Serbinenko's use of flow-directed detachable balloons in an eurysms, AVMs and CC fistulas ignited wide interest and sent a tremor through the neurosurgical world. We had oc casionally used the Luessenhop technique since the mid 1970s but it was the arrival on our unit of Gerard Deb run, who had introduced these balloon techniques in Paris, which galvanized our interest and collaborative par ticipation in endovascular approaches. Not surprising was the decline of enthusiasm for balloon occlusion of the aneu rysm sac itself, which produced high morbidity from pre mature detachment and embolization, rupture of the aneu rysm or the balloon with its contents. Seldom was oblitera tion of the aneurysm complete since a balloon could not usually conform to the shape of the sac. Detachable bal loons have found their niche in proximal parent artery oc clusion for inoperable aneurysms and in closing CC fistulae. The evolution of treatment with wire coils was rapid after the development of wire-guided catheters. It was the ingenu ity of Guglielmi and his engineer Sepetka that led to tether ing the coil to the wire so that it could be detached electri cally only after its placement in the aneurysm seemed ap propriate and safe; multiple coil placements are usual. The ease with which catheters could be guided into vir tually all intracranial arteries was astonishing. But techni cal failure to enter aneurysms, due to tortuosity of athero sclerotic vessels or the take off angle of the aneurysm, may occur in up to 10% of cases. Coil placement is not without morbidity - mostly thromboembolism and occa sional rupture of the aneurysm. Surgeons have sympathy for radiologists who are faced with these potentially cata strophic events, in having to deal with them at the end of a catheter instead of directly. The authors conclude that the endovascular technique carries less morbidity than) Foreword IX conventional craniotomy. However it should be noted that the overall good outcome in the largest series of coiling for acute aneurysms (85%) is about the same as early cra niotomy for ruptured basilar aneurysms. The disappoint ment is that complete obliteration is seldom possible ex cept in small necked aneurysms which are so straightfor ward for surgeons. Even small remnants of an incomple tely clipped neck are known to enlarge into a new and dangerous aneurysm. One wonders what will happen over the years with wholly open ostia or those merely plugged with wire. Yet medium follow-up over the first few years in small series has shown little recurrence except in aneu rysms with necks over 4 mm in diameter. It is predictable that advances with coil techniques for the complete obliteration of larger aneurysms will occur, perhaps with the assistance of balloon packing, stents, or even endosaccular plastic. The endovascular approach to the coiling of aneurysms has an appealing simplicity and will be widely adopted outside major centres even though plagued with incom pleteness. If this can be rectified it may become the pre ferred primary treatment for most intracranial aneurysms if its morbidity remains low. Until then and in response to the authors' plea for collaborativecmanagement, I have suggested that in units where few endovascular proce dures are done that only the fundus of acutely ruptured aneurysms be packed with coils down to the waist leaving the neck open, which could be done with little morbidity. The patients now safe from early rebleeding could be tided over their hemorrhagic brain injury even using hy pertension and angioplasty for vasospasm. Then a month or so later an operation for clipping completely the re maining neck could be carried out under a slack healed brain also with very low morbidity. Such an approach should accomplish the desirable; prevent rebleeding, and complete the obliteration of the aneurysm with a com bined long-term morbidity far less than either technique alone. Patients with wide necked aneurysms would not have to face the risk of thromboembolism again when the enlarging residual sac had to be repacked every fe~ months or years. This approach would not preclude those few investigating new techniques from continuing their attempts for more complete endosaccular occlusions. However, I suspect it will be difficult to stay the hands of many endovascular radiologists or surgeons who will want to try for completeness on their own. Charles G. Drake, O. c., M. n, FRCSC - Preface The collaboration between the two authors that has resulted in the production of this book began 8 years ago. Dr. Byrne visited the University of California at Los Angeles at a time when clinical trials of the Guglielmi detachable coil were just beginning, and he subsequently imported the technol ogy to the United Kingdom, performing the first clinical treatment there in 1992. The authors have worked together since to establish training programmes for the propagation of the techniques involved in coil embolisation. As a result, regular GDC Training Courses have been held in Oxford and Los Angeles over the last 4 years, and many of the prin ciples described here owe their origins to the intellectual discipline needed in such teaching. Because the technology involves the development and practice of new skills, the timing of a book such as this is critical. We now feel that the technology is mature enough for didactic description but are sensitive to its youth and the need for its continued critical evaluation. The authors are however bound by more than a thin piece of platinum wire. In producing this text we have drawn on surgical principles learnt in the neurosurgical training both of us experienced before practising inter ventional neuroradiology. It was obvious to us that a text book based on a single technology, such as the Guglielmi detachable coil, would simply be a technical manual. We have therefore attempted to present the technology in the context of its role in the management of patients with in tracranial aneurysms. Such management has been prac-" tised by neurosurgeons for the last 60 years and that ex perience is vital to endovascular therapists coming lately to the bedside of patients with subarachnoid haemor rhage. We simply cannot afford not to build on the neuro surgical heritage. Inevitably, the technical aspects of what we have written will date, but the principles of operative surgery which we have tried to bring to the W9rk are vir tually timeless. XII Preface We would like to acknowledge the assistance of Mrs. Min-Joo Sohn in the preparation of the manuscript, the medical illustration departments of UCLA Medical Centre and Oxford University and our respective colleagues for their help and advice. The hand-drawn illustrations are the work of Juliet Bailey, who happens to be married to the English author. We are also most grateful to Dr. Charles Drake for providing a foreword to the book. J.V. Byrne G. Guglielmi

Description:
This volume is a comprehensive review of current endovascular techniques for the treatment of cerebral aneurysms. It is intended to be a practical manual for those practicing, or intending to practice, this rapidly expanding branch of minimally invasive surgery. The authors provide descriptions base
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