Abstract

Flow diversion (FD)-a young technique using stents with highly increased surface coverage-was introduced to treat complex aneurysms without intra-aneurysmal material placement and has amended the spectrum of endovascular techniques such as stent-assisted coil occlusion considerably. However, ischemic complications, a common side effect in FD, occur more frequently compared with the conventional endovascular approaches and certainly limit the indication of this technique. Our study aimed to investigate the feasibility and efficacy of stent-assisted coiling using low profile self-expandable stents, which exhibit only moderate flow-redirecting properties and therefore represent a combination of hemodynamic endovascular and occlusive endosaccular therapy. 39 Patients were included in our retrospective study. Occlusion rates were assessed 6 months after the procedure in a total of 27 cases using the Raymond scale. Complete occlusion (Raymond I) was achieved in 24/27 aneurysms. Small neck remnants (Raymond II) were evident in 3/27 aneurysms. There were no cases with sac remnant or complete persistence of aneurysmal filling (Raymond III and IV). Our study demonstrates interventional treatment of intracranial aneurysms using flow-redirecting stent-assisted coiling to be technically feasible and highly effective in aneurysmal occlusion. We believe that this approach is outstanding in the prevention of long-term aneurysmal reperfusion and exhibits a more acceptable risk profile than highly efficient FD techniques.

Highlights

  • Stenting and coiling (SAC) as well as balloon-assisted coiling (BAC) are both longstanding, well established endovascular approaches for the treatment of complex cases of intracranial aneurysms [1,2,3], recanalization of, respectively, treated aneurysms still occurs in a number of cases [4]

  • 39 patients (25 females, 14 males) with a total of 40 aneurysms were included in our retrospective evaluation

  • The average patient age was 54.3 years. 32 patients were scheduled for elective treatment, 7 patients had ruptured aneurysms with subsequent subarachnoid hemorrhage. 9 patients were already pretreated with aneurysm coiling and were scheduled of elective re-intervention of dome or neck remnants

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Summary

Introduction

Stenting and coiling (SAC) as well as balloon-assisted coiling (BAC) are both longstanding, well established endovascular approaches for the treatment of complex cases of intracranial aneurysms [1,2,3], recanalization of, respectively, treated aneurysms still occurs in a number of cases [4]. FD uses devices with significantly increased material coverage in comparison with conventional stents, aiming to reconstruct the parent vessel whilst excluding the aneurysm from the circulation [5, 13, 14]. This new technique has already become the preferential treatment method of choice for a number of types of aneurysms [15]. Our study aimed to investigate the feasibility and efficacy of stent-assisted coiling using low profile self-expandable stents, which exhibit only moderate flow-redirecting properties and represent a combination of hemodynamic endovascular and occlusive endosaccular therapy

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