Abstract

After revascularization surgery for patients with moyamoya disease (MMD), local and global hemodynamic changes occur intraoperatively and in the early postoperative period. Local cerebral hyperperfusion and watershed shift ischemia are well-known perioperative pathologies after revascularization for MMD, but early venous filling phenomenon is markedly rare. We report the case of a 19-year-old woman with hemorrhagic-onset MMD who presented with grand mal seizure and subarachnoid hemorrhage. She underwent superficial temporal artery (STA)–middle cerebral artery (MCA) anastomosis combined with indirect pial synangiosis on the affected hemisphere. Intraoperatively, notable early arterial blood filling in the fine cortical vein was observed around the site of anastomosis right after the STA–MCA anastomosis under the surgical microscope and fluorescence indocyanine green video angiography. Recovery of consciousness after general anesthesia was normal, although she exhibited a focal seizure 1 hour later. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging was not remarkable, and cerebral hemodynamics significantly improved in the acute stage after surgical revascularization. Considering the intrinsic vulnerability of the microvascular anatomy of MMD, the present case is notable because early venous filling was observed intraoperatively. This phenomenon suggests the existence of a potential arteriovenous shunt as an underlying pathology of MMD, but its implications in the early postoperative course should be further verified in a larger number of MMD patients undergoing surgical revascularization.

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