Abstract

The study objective is to analyze the results of combined (direct and indirect) brain revascularization in adult patients with moyamoya disease. Materials and methods. From February 2015 to August 2016, 12 operations were performed on 12 hemispheres in 7 patients (2 men, 5 women) with moyamoya disease. Six patients had bilateral disease, 1 – unilateral. The age of patients ranged from 25 to 60 year old, the average – 41 year old. Multislice computed tomography (MSCT) perfusion imaging of the brain with a stress test was made in every patient, MSCT angiography of the extraand intracranial arteries was perfomed. Stages of the disease were determined according to the Suzuki–Takaku classification: stage III was revealed in 5 patients, stage IV – in 2. To evaluate the clinical course of the disease the Matsushima classification was used: type VI – in 2 cases, type III – in 2, type IV – in 1, type V – in 1. In 1 case, the pathological vascular network of 1 hemisphere was detected by accident. Extracranial-intracranial (EC–IC) bypass and encephaloduromyosynangiosis (EDMS) was used in 3 cases; a double-barreled EC–IC bypass and EDMS – in 3; a double-barreled EC–IC bypass and encephaloduroperiosteomyosynangiosis – in 1; EC–IC bypass and encephaloduroarteriomyosynangiosis (EDAMS) – in 3. In 1 case was perfomed EC–IC bypass and encephaloduroperiosteosynangiosis. Only indirect revascularization was performed in 1 case – EDAMS. We assessed the neurological status in the follow-up period (5–11 months); MSCT angiography and MSCT perfusion imaging of the brain were performed. Results. All patients in follow-up period demonstrated the increase of cerebrovascular reserve according to MSCT perfusion imaging of the brain with stress tests. Stroke, epilepsy, surgical complications were not detected in the postoperative period. In 1 case, the left-hand monoparesis regressed.Conclusion. The combined (direct and indirect) revascularization may be effective in adult patients with moyamoya disease. To obtain more objective conclusions it is necessary to analyze the long-term results of interventions.

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