Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION We present the largest prospective cohort of intra-saccular pressure recordings of ruptured and non-ruptured intracranial aneurysms. METHODS Aneurysmal dome pressure was collected using a standard 1.8 Fr micro-catheter which was navigated into the dome of the aneurysm under continuous roadmap and fluoroscopic guidance taking care to avoid placement against the wall and past the neck. Once in place, a transducer was attached to the proximal end of the micro-catheter to measure stump pressures for an estimated 60 seconds and only considered valid when clear systole and diastole profiles were observed. Transducer re-zeroing and line re-prepping was performed in the absence of systole and diastole profiles to confirm invalid data prior to data exclusion. RESULTS >A prospective cohort of 38 patients were included in the study. 8 patients' data were discarded due to poor waveform during measurement. Of the remaining 30 patients, 14 presented with ruptured aneurysms while 16 were elective non-ruptured cases. The mean pulse pressure in non-ruptured cases was 21.7 with standard deviation of 17.0 compared to mean of 5.8 and standard deviation of 5.0 in ruptured cases. In addition the average systolic aneurysm pressure was 91% of the systolic blood pressure in non-ruptured cases compared to 78% in ruptured cases. CONCLUSION There is a significant difference noted in systolic and overall pulse pressures between ruptured and non-ruptured aneurysm groups with P = 0.05 and 0.005 respectively. This finding could be due to rupture effect phenomenon in which case this technique could aid in differentiating between ruptured and non-ruptured aneurysms. We hypothesize that lower aneurysm systolic and pulse pressures could be suggestive of low wall shear stress at the aneurysm dome which has been implicated in secondary inflammation of the aneurysm wall leading to aneurysmal rupture. This information could be important for risk stratification of non-ruptured intracranial aneurysms.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call