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Research ArticleINTERVENTIONAL

Aneurysms of the Vertebrobasilar Junction: Incidence, Clinical Presentation, and Outcome of Endovascular Treatment

J.P.P. Peluso, W.J. van Rooij, M. Sluzewski and G.N. Beute
American Journal of Neuroradiology October 2007, 28 (9) 1747-1751; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A0654
J.P.P. Peluso
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W.J. van Rooij
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M. Sluzewski
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G.N. Beute
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  • Fig 1.
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    Fig 1.

    52-year-old woman with good-grade SAH. A and B, 3D angiogram (A) shows a small vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm on the proximal part of a basilar fenestration and 6 months (B) later demonstrates stable complete occlusion of the aneurysm.

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    Fig 2.

    A 64-year-old man with ruptured vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm. A and B, 3D (A) and 2D (B) angiograms demonstrate a dumbbell-shaped vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm on the bridging artery of a basilar fenestration. C, After coiling is performed, complete occlusion is seen.

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    Fig 3.

    A 29-year-old man with sudden neck pain followed by right-sided muscle weakness and difficulty in swallowing. A and B, MR image (A) and frontal bilateral vertebral angiogram (B) show a giant partially thrombosed vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm compressing the brain stem. C, Bilateral frontal carotid angiogram after occluding the right vertebral artery proximal to the PICA with a balloon (arrow) and the left vertebral artery distal to the PICA with coils (double arrow). Flow to the basilar artery is reversed with outflow to the right PICA, yet the aneurysm lumen still fills. D, Lateral radiograph during coiling of the aneurysm lumen via the posterior communicating artery 2 months later. The arrow indicates deflated balloon remnant in the right vertebral artery. The double arrow indicates coils in the left vertebral artery. E–G, Six months later, a frontal view of right carotid angiogram (E) demonstrates filling of the basilar artery via the right posterior communicating artery. Frontal view of the right thyrocervical trunk (F) shows recanalization of the distal right vertebral artery with filling of the PICA territory. Frontal view of the left vertebral angiogram (G) shows filling of the left PICA territory. The aneurysm is completely occluded. H, MR imaging 2 years after presentation shows remarkable shrinkage of the aneurysm. The patient was free of symptoms.

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    Fig 4.

    3D angiogram shows a vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm on the bridging artery of a basilar fenestration. With this anatomy, sparing the parent bridging artery would be sensible in preserving flow to the basilar artery. RV indicates right vertebral artery; LV, left vertebral artery; BA, basilar artery. (Compare with Fig 2.)

Tables

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  • Patient and aneurysm characteristics of 10 patients with vertebrobasilar junction aneurysms

    Patient No./Sex/ AgeClinical PresentationAneurysmTimingTreatmentInitial/Final Result (%)Outcome (months)Angiographic Follow-UpRemarks
    1/F/75SAH + IVH, HH V10-mm, dumbbell, fenestration2 daysCoil occlusion100GOS 3 (43)RefusedDependent in nursing home
    2/F/46SAH, HH III12 mm, fenestration2 daysCoil occlusion90–90GOS 1 (30)30 monthsAdditional AcomA aneurysm coiled
    3/M/31SAH, HH III7 mm10 daysCoil occlusion100–100GOS 1 (18)6 months–
    4/F/52SAH, HH II5 mm, fenestration2 daysCoil occlusion100–100GOS 1 (24)24 months–
    5/F/44SAH + IVH, HH IV6 mm, fenestration3 daysCoil occlusion, EVD100GOS 5 (0.2)–Died of vasospasm
    6/M/64SAH + IVH, HH I10 mm, dumbbell fenestration2 daysCoil occlusion, EVD100–100GOS 1 (27)12 monthsDied 27 months later of cardiac disease
    7/M/29SAH + IVH, HH III12-mm, dumbbell2 daysCoil occlusion90–100GOS 1 (6)6 monthsProgressive thrombosis, aneurysm + V4 segments bilaterally
    8/M/55SAH + IVH, HH II5 mm, fenestration6 daysCoil occlusion100–90GOS 1 (27)27 months
    9/F/70SAH + IVH, HH V17 mm, fenestration1 dayCoil occlusion EVD100GOS (0.1)–Died of SAH
    10/M/30Mass effect: neck pain, right sided muscle, weakness, and swallowing difficulty47 mm, partially thrombosed–Bilateral vertebral artery occlusion, V3 right, V4 left, later coiling via PcomA0–100GOS 1 (24)24 monthsProgressive complete thrombosis and partial involution aneurysm + V4 segments bilaterally; mass effect cured
    • Note:—IVH indicates intraventricular hemorrhage; GOS, Glasgow Outcome Scale; –, not applicable; EVD, extraventricular drainage; PcomA, posterior communicating artery; AcomA, anterior communicating artery; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; HH, Hunt and Hess scale.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 28 (9)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 28, Issue 9
October 2007
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J.P.P. Peluso, W.J. van Rooij, M. Sluzewski, G.N. Beute
Aneurysms of the Vertebrobasilar Junction: Incidence, Clinical Presentation, and Outcome of Endovascular Treatment
American Journal of Neuroradiology Oct 2007, 28 (9) 1747-1751; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A0654

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Aneurysms of the Vertebrobasilar Junction: Incidence, Clinical Presentation, and Outcome of Endovascular Treatment
J.P.P. Peluso, W.J. van Rooij, M. Sluzewski, G.N. Beute
American Journal of Neuroradiology Oct 2007, 28 (9) 1747-1751; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A0654
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  • Republished: Flanking the fenestration: circumferential limb-to-limb stent-assisted coiling of a basilar artery fenestration aneurysm
  • Flanking the fenestration: circumferential limb-to-limb stent-assisted coiling of a basilar artery fenestration aneurysm
  • 3D Computational Fluid Dynamics of a Treated Vertebrobasilar Giant Aneurysm: A Multistage Analysis
  • Endovascular treatment with 'kissing' flow diverter stents of two unruptured aneurysms at a fenestrated vertebrobasilar junction
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More in this TOC Section

  • Safety, Efficacy, and Durability of Stent-Assisted Coiling Treatment of M2 (Insular) Segment MCA Aneurysms
  • Endovascular Management of Intracranial Dural AVFs: Transvenous Approach
  • A Meta-analysis of Combined Aspiration Catheter and Stent Retriever versus Stent Retriever Alone for Large-Vessel Occlusion Ischemic Stroke
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