Abstract

Over the last years, intraoperative use of fluorescein is gaining ground in the field of neurosurgery, due to development of a microscope-integrated YELLOW 560 module, with reported experiences in brain malignancies, aneurysms, and arteriovenous malformation surgery. The aim of this study is to determine the feasibility and value of fluorescein videoangiography during bypass procedures. The authors enrolled 11 patients who underwent extracranial-to-intracranial bypass for moyamoya disease, atherosclerotic steno-occlusive cerebrovascular disease, and flow replacement during a giant middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysm treatment. Patients underwent fluorescein videoangiography using microscope-integrated fluorescence module. In all 11 cases, good bypass patency was intraoperatively demonstrated through fluorescein videoangiography and confirmed by post-operative digital subtraction angiography or computed tomographic angiography. The technique seems to be less sensible than standard indocyanine green videoangiography in terms of flow velocity assessment during first pass and does not benefit from a dedicated software to perform hemodynamic parameter analysis (i.e., FLOW 800). Fluorescein videoangiography was able to show a higher number of vesselsthanindocyanine green videoangiography, providing an extremely well-defined view of cortical vascular network, also in deeper cortical areas. In case of deep-seated anastomosis, it allowed real-time manipulation of neurovascular structures, making it possible a safe analysis of vessels in deep surgical field during videoangiography observation. Fluorescein videoangiography is a cost-effective, easy-to-use, fast and safe intraoperative tool and is useful to assess graft patency and extent of cortical vascular network also in deeper cortical areas. In case of deep-seated anastomosis, it provides the great advantage of performing real-time manipulation of neurovascular structures during videoangiography observation. It could represent a valuable complementary or alternative technique to assess intraoperative bypass function.

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