Abstract

Wide-necked aneurysms can be treated by double stenting in an X- or Y-configuration or by a double waffle-cone technique. However, some aneurysms remain untreatable. The rupture of a complex wide-necked anterior communicating artery (AcomA) aneurysm that caused acute subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) was treated successfully using double stents with an opposite L-configuration as an alternative to the X-stent technique. The aneurysm involved both A1-A2 junctions in the aneurysm neck with acutely oriented A2 segments of the anterior cerebral artery bilaterally. It was densely packed and completely obliterated angiographically with preserved blood flow by implanting each stent in the ipsilateral A1-A2 bilaterally. Blood flow from the left A1 to the right A2 was confirmed through the AcomA on injection of the left internal carotid artery immediately after the procedure without critical infarction in the subthalamic area. Although the AcomA was not demonstrated by injection of the left internal carotid artery on angiography at 3 months or 1 year later, no cerebral infarction was seen on magnetic resonance images at the final hospital visit. Opposite L-configuration double stenting was used successfully as rescue stent-assisted coiling for a rupture of a complex wide-necked AcomA aneurysm in a patient with acute SAH.

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