Abstract

Balloon-assisted coiling (BAC) is an endovascular treatment that may be associated with increased complications and thromboembolic events compared with other coiling techniques. We compared clinical outcomes of endovascular treatment (simple coiling, stent-assisted coiling, and BAC) in patients with unruptured intracranial aneurysms at the internal carotid artery and assessed risk factors that could cause cerebral infarction in patients who underwent BAC. We retrospectively reviewed the records of 528 patients with 544 aneurysms who underwent endovascular treatment for unruptured intracranial aneurysms between January 2013 and November 2019. Demographic features, clinical information, balloon inflation time, fetal posterior cerebral artery, anterior cerebral artery (ACA) variants, and angiographic results were analyzed to determine risk factors for cerebral infarction. There were no significant differences among the 3 groups in terms of general characteristics. In the BAC group, 14 of 39 patients showed a significantly higher incidence of cerebral infarction on diffusion magnetic resonance imaging compared with the stent-assisted coiling (37/238) and simple coiling (21/267) groups (P<0.001). There was no significant difference between the ACA variants (normal vs. hypoplasia or aplasia) and cerebral infarction in the simple coiling and stent-assisted coiling groups, but the proportion of aplasia or hypoplasia in the BAC group was significantly higher (P=0.001). There is a significant association between anatomic ACA variants and cerebral infarction occurrence after BAC. Identifying the variant of the anatomic ACA using digital subtraction angiography would help to predict cerebral infarction after BAC.

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