Abstract

BackgroundThe excimer laser-assisted non-occlusive anastomosis (ELANA) bypass technique may have the advantage of its non-occlusive design in the treatment of last-resort cases where endovascular treatment or direct clipping is considered to be unsafe. However, the technique remains technically challenging. Therefore, a sutureless ELANA Clip device (SEcl) was developed to simplify the technique avoiding tedious anastomosis stitching in depth.The present study investigates the clinical feasibility and safety of the SEcl technique.MethodsThree patients with complex and large aneurysms in the anterior circulation were selected after multidisciplinary consensus that the aneurysms were too complex for endovascular or direct clipping treatment options. Bypass surgery was considered as a last-resort treatment option, and after preoperative evaluation and informed consent, SEcl bypass surgery was performed. Applicability, technical aspects and patient outcomes are assessed.ResultsAll aneurysms were excluded from the circulation. The creation of the intracranial anastomosis was easier and faster. No device-related serious adverse events were encountered, and all outcomes were favorable (one patient stable Modified Rankin Scale, two patients improved).ConclusionThe SEcl anastomosis technique is feasible and, considering the severity of the disease, relatively safe. It can be considered a treatment option in very difficult-to treat last-resort aneurysm cases. From this study, further developments in minimizing clip size and application in cardiac surgery are initiated.

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