Pipeline Embolization Device for Pericallosal Artery Aneurysms: A Retrospective Single Center Safety and Efficacy Study
Abstract BACKGROUND Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters. METHODS We performed a retrospective...
Saved in:
Published in | Operative neurosurgery (Hagerstown, Md.) Vol. 14; no. 4; pp. 351 - 358 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
Oxford University Press
01.04.2018
Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 2332-4252 2332-4260 2332-4260 |
DOI | 10.1093/ons/opx111 |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | Abstract
BACKGROUND
Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques.
OBJECTIVE
To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters.
METHODS
We performed a retrospective review of our institutional database from July 2013 through July 2016 and identified 7 subjects with a pericallosal artery aneurysm treated with the Pipeline embolization device (ev3 Neurovascular, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) and at least 1 follow-up angiogram. Technical feasibility, procedural complication, angiographic results, and clinical outcome were evaluated.
RESULTS
Placement of the Pipeline embolization device was successful in all cases without evidence of procedural complication. Five out of 7 subjects showed a complete aneurysm occlusion at 6- to 12-mo follow-up angiogram. The 2 subjects with persistent aneurysm filling showed decreased aneurysm sac volume on follow-up angiograms (96% and 60%). There was no evidence of in-implant stenosis or intimal hyperplasia. No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic complications were seen during the follow-up period. Only 1 patient had a transient change in Modified Rankin scale score from baseline as a result of different unrelated procedure.
CONCLUSION
Our preliminary results demonstrate feasibility of the use of flow diverter stent for treatment of aneurysms of the pericallosal artery with rate of aneurysm occlusion comparable to literature and without evidence of increased procedural or short-term morbidity. A long-term and larger cohort study is needed to validate our findings. |
---|---|
AbstractList | Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques.
To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters.
We performed a retrospective review of our institutional database from July 2013 through July 2016 and identified 7 subjects with a pericallosal artery aneurysm treated with the Pipeline embolization device (ev3 Neurovascular, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) and at least 1 follow-up angiogram. Technical feasibility, procedural complication, angiographic results, and clinical outcome were evaluated.
Placement of the Pipeline embolization device was successful in all cases without evidence of procedural complication. Five out of 7 subjects showed a complete aneurysm occlusion at 6- to 12-mo follow-up angiogram. The 2 subjects with persistent aneurysm filling showed decreased aneurysm sac volume on follow-up angiograms (96% and 60%). There was no evidence of in-implant stenosis or intimal hyperplasia. No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic complications were seen during the follow-up period. Only 1 patient had a transient change in Modified Rankin scale score from baseline as a result of different unrelated procedure.
Our preliminary results demonstrate feasibility of the use of flow diverter stent for treatment of aneurysms of the pericallosal artery with rate of aneurysm occlusion comparable to literature and without evidence of increased procedural or short-term morbidity. A long-term and larger cohort study is needed to validate our findings. Abstract BACKGROUND Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters. METHODS We performed a retrospective review of our institutional database from July 2013 through July 2016 and identified 7 subjects with a pericallosal artery aneurysm treated with the Pipeline embolization device (ev3 Neurovascular, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) and at least 1 follow-up angiogram. Technical feasibility, procedural complication, angiographic results, and clinical outcome were evaluated. RESULTS Placement of the Pipeline embolization device was successful in all cases without evidence of procedural complication. Five out of 7 subjects showed a complete aneurysm occlusion at 6- to 12-mo follow-up angiogram. The 2 subjects with persistent aneurysm filling showed decreased aneurysm sac volume on follow-up angiograms (96% and 60%). There was no evidence of in-implant stenosis or intimal hyperplasia. No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic complications were seen during the follow-up period. Only 1 patient had a transient change in Modified Rankin scale score from baseline as a result of different unrelated procedure. CONCLUSION Our preliminary results demonstrate feasibility of the use of flow diverter stent for treatment of aneurysms of the pericallosal artery with rate of aneurysm occlusion comparable to literature and without evidence of increased procedural or short-term morbidity. A long-term and larger cohort study is needed to validate our findings. BACKGROUND Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters. METHODS We performed a retrospective review of our institutional database from July 2013 through July 2016 and identified 7 subjects with a pericallosal artery aneurysm treated with the Pipeline embolization device (ev3 Neurovascular, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) and at least 1 follow-up angiogram. Technical feasibility, procedural complication, angiographic results, and clinical outcome were evaluated. RESULTS Placement of the Pipeline embolization device was successful in all cases without evidence of procedural complication. Five out of 7 subjects showed a complete aneurysm occlusion at 6- to 12-mo follow-up angiogram. The 2 subjects with persistent aneurysm filling showed decreased aneurysm sac volume on follow-up angiograms (96% and 60%). There was no evidence of in-implant stenosis or intimal hyperplasia. No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic complications were seen during the follow-up period. Only 1 patient had a transient change in Modified Rankin scale score from baseline as a result of different unrelated procedure. CONCLUSION Our preliminary results demonstrate feasibility of the use of flow diverter stent for treatment of aneurysms of the pericallosal artery with rate of aneurysm occlusion comparable to literature and without evidence of increased procedural or short-term morbidity. A long-term and larger cohort study is needed to validate our findings. Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques.BACKGROUNDPericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques.To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters.OBJECTIVETo demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endovascular treatment of pericallosal artery aneurysm using flow diverters.We performed a retrospective review of our institutional database from July 2013 through July 2016 and identified 7 subjects with a pericallosal artery aneurysm treated with the Pipeline embolization device (ev3 Neurovascular, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) and at least 1 follow-up angiogram. Technical feasibility, procedural complication, angiographic results, and clinical outcome were evaluated.METHODSWe performed a retrospective review of our institutional database from July 2013 through July 2016 and identified 7 subjects with a pericallosal artery aneurysm treated with the Pipeline embolization device (ev3 Neurovascular, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) and at least 1 follow-up angiogram. Technical feasibility, procedural complication, angiographic results, and clinical outcome were evaluated.Placement of the Pipeline embolization device was successful in all cases without evidence of procedural complication. Five out of 7 subjects showed a complete aneurysm occlusion at 6- to 12-mo follow-up angiogram. The 2 subjects with persistent aneurysm filling showed decreased aneurysm sac volume on follow-up angiograms (96% and 60%). There was no evidence of in-implant stenosis or intimal hyperplasia. No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic complications were seen during the follow-up period. Only 1 patient had a transient change in Modified Rankin scale score from baseline as a result of different unrelated procedure.RESULTSPlacement of the Pipeline embolization device was successful in all cases without evidence of procedural complication. Five out of 7 subjects showed a complete aneurysm occlusion at 6- to 12-mo follow-up angiogram. The 2 subjects with persistent aneurysm filling showed decreased aneurysm sac volume on follow-up angiograms (96% and 60%). There was no evidence of in-implant stenosis or intimal hyperplasia. No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic complications were seen during the follow-up period. Only 1 patient had a transient change in Modified Rankin scale score from baseline as a result of different unrelated procedure.Our preliminary results demonstrate feasibility of the use of flow diverter stent for treatment of aneurysms of the pericallosal artery with rate of aneurysm occlusion comparable to literature and without evidence of increased procedural or short-term morbidity. A long-term and larger cohort study is needed to validate our findings.CONCLUSIONOur preliminary results demonstrate feasibility of the use of flow diverter stent for treatment of aneurysms of the pericallosal artery with rate of aneurysm occlusion comparable to literature and without evidence of increased procedural or short-term morbidity. A long-term and larger cohort study is needed to validate our findings. |
Author | Howk, Mary C Marosfoi, Miklos G Hou, Samuel Y Puri, Ajit S Massari, Francesco Perras, Mary Kühn, Anna Luisa De Macedo Rodrigues, Katyucia Rex, David E Tamura, Takamitsu Kan, Peter Wakhloo, Ajay K Lozano, J Diego Dabus, Guilherme Brooks, Christopher Gounis, Matthew J |
AuthorAffiliation | 1 Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts 2 Baptist Cardiac and Vascular Institute, Miami, Florida 3 Depa-rtment of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: 2 Baptist Cardiac and Vascular Institute, Miami, Florida – name: 1 Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – name: 3 Depa-rtment of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Katyucia surname: De Macedo Rodrigues fullname: De Macedo Rodrigues, Katyucia organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 2 givenname: Anna Luisa surname: Kühn fullname: Kühn, Anna Luisa organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 3 givenname: Takamitsu surname: Tamura fullname: Tamura, Takamitsu organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 4 givenname: Guilherme surname: Dabus fullname: Dabus, Guilherme organization: Baptist Cardiac and Vascular Institute, Miami, Florida – sequence: 5 givenname: Peter surname: Kan fullname: Kan, Peter organization: Depa-rtment of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas – sequence: 6 givenname: Miklos G surname: Marosfoi fullname: Marosfoi, Miklos G organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 7 givenname: J Diego surname: Lozano fullname: Lozano, J Diego organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 8 givenname: Mary surname: Perras fullname: Perras, Mary organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 9 givenname: Christopher surname: Brooks fullname: Brooks, Christopher organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 10 givenname: Mary C surname: Howk fullname: Howk, Mary C organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 11 givenname: Samuel Y surname: Hou fullname: Hou, Samuel Y organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 12 givenname: David E surname: Rex fullname: Rex, David E organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 13 givenname: Francesco surname: Massari fullname: Massari, Francesco organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 14 givenname: Matthew J surname: Gounis fullname: Gounis, Matthew J organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 15 givenname: Ajay K surname: Wakhloo fullname: Wakhloo, Ajay K organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts – sequence: 16 givenname: Ajit S surname: Puri fullname: Puri, Ajit S email: ajit.puri@umassmemorial.org organization: Division of Neuroimaging and Interve-ntion and New England Center for Stroke Research, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28521024$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNp9kV9rFDEUxYNUbK198QNIQAQR1iaZSWbjg7Cs6x8oWFx9DpnMTU3JJGMyszp-eqNbFy3i071wf_dw7j330VGIARB6SMlzSmR1HkM-j8M3SukddMKqii1qJsjRoefsGJ3lfE0IoVXNSVPfQ8dsyRklrD5BXy_dAN4FwJu-jd5916OLAb-CnTOAbUz4EpIz2vuYtcerNEKa8SrAlObc5xd4hT_AmGIewIxuB3jrwpUHvIZQSLzVFsYZ69DhjbVFx8x4O07d_ADdtdpnOLupp-jT683H9dvFxfs379ari4XhhI0LzoWWtpa8Na2xbdsY3dSiEtTSpaRd3VFuOw3MNI2saSNIJ00jOLOM6FaXF5yil3vdYWp76EyxlbRXQ3K9TrOK2qm_J8F9VldxpwThTS1FEXh6I5DilwnyqHqXDXivA8QpKyoJWVZSMFLQx7fQ6zilUM5TrBJCUCoFLdSjPx0drPzOpADP9oApb80J7AGhRP3MXJXM1T7zApNbsHHjrwzLNc7_e-XJfiVOw_-kfwADvr7K |
CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1007_s00062_022_01187_6 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_radcr_2021_05_063 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_wneu_2022_08_052 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_wneu_2023_07_022 crossref_primary_10_3174_ajnr_A5615 crossref_primary_10_1136_neurintsurg_2018_014631 crossref_primary_10_1136_neurintsurg_2020_015980 crossref_primary_10_1136_svn_2020_000347 crossref_primary_10_3174_ajnr_A6002 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_wneu_2019_05_181 crossref_primary_10_1136_jnis_2023_020391 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_wneu_2021_07_055 crossref_primary_10_5797_jnet_oa_2020_0143 crossref_primary_10_1136_jnis_2023_021164 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_wneu_2022_02_034 crossref_primary_10_3174_ajnr_A6352 |
Cites_doi | 10.3171/2014.12.JNS14411 10.3174/ajnr.A4329 10.1148/radiol.13120099 10.1227/01.NEU.0000339109.98070.65 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011237 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2015.10.047 10.1007/s00234-015-1630-5 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011320 10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.533760 10.1136/jnis.2011.004770 10.3174/ajnr.A3080 10.1136/jnis.2009.000083 10.3174/ajnr.A2023 10.1136/neurintsurg-2015-012028 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)11314-6 10.3174/ajnr.A3742 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011355 10.1007/978-3-211-99373-6_3 10.3174/ajnr.A4078 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011412 10.1016/j.jocn.2016.10.041 10.1136/neurintsurg-2015-012084 |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | Copyright © 2017 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2018 Copyright © 2017 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons |
Copyright_xml | – notice: Copyright © 2017 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2018 – notice: Copyright © 2017 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons |
DBID | AAYXX CITATION CGR CUY CVF ECM EIF NPM 3V. 7X7 7XB 8FI 8FJ 8FK ABUWG AFKRA BENPR CCPQU FYUFA GHDGH K9. M0S PQEST PQQKQ PQUKI PRINS 7X8 5PM |
DOI | 10.1093/ons/opx111 |
DatabaseName | CrossRef Medline MEDLINE MEDLINE (Ovid) MEDLINE MEDLINE PubMed ProQuest Central (Corporate) Health & Medical Collection ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016) Hospital Premium Collection Hospital Premium Collection (Alumni Edition) ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016) ProQuest Central (Alumni) ProQuest Central UK/Ireland ProQuest Central ProQuest One Community College Health Research Premium Collection Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni) ProQuest Health & Medical Collection ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE) ProQuest One Academic ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition ProQuest Central China MEDLINE - Academic PubMed Central (Full Participant titles) |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef MEDLINE Medline Complete MEDLINE with Full Text PubMed MEDLINE (Ovid) ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni) ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition) ProQuest One Community College ProQuest Hospital Collection Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Central China ProQuest Hospital Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Central ProQuest Health & Medical Complete Health Research Premium Collection ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition Health and Medicine Complete (Alumni Edition) ProQuest One Academic ProQuest Central (Alumni) MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitleList | MEDLINE ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition MEDLINE - Academic |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: NPM name: PubMed url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed sourceTypes: Index Database – sequence: 2 dbid: EIF name: MEDLINE url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://www.webofscience.com/wos/medline/basic-search sourceTypes: Index Database – sequence: 3 dbid: 7X7 name: ProQuest_Health & Medical Collection url: https://search.proquest.com/healthcomplete sourceTypes: Aggregation Database |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
EISSN | 2332-4260 |
EndPage | 358 |
ExternalDocumentID | PMC6057496 28521024 10_1093_ons_opx111 10.1093/ons/opx111 |
Genre | Journal Article |
GrantInformation_xml | – fundername: NIH funderid: 10.13039/100000002 – fundername: ; ; ; |
GroupedDBID | 0R~ 3V. 48X 53G 7X7 8FI 8FJ AAAAV AAAXR AAGIX AAHPQ AAIQE AAJQQ AAPQZ AAQKA AAQOH AAQQT AARTV AASCR AASXQ AAUQX AAVAP ABASU ABDIG ABJNI ABLJU ABPTD ABUWG ABXVJ ACGFS ACILI ACOAL ACXJB ACXNZ ADBBV ADGZP ADHKW ADHPY ADRTK AEETU AEMDU AENEX AENZO AETBJ AEWNT AFDTB AFFZL AFKRA AFOFC AFUWQ AGINJ AHMBA AHOMT AHQNM AJNWD AJZMW ALIPV ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AMNEI APIBT BAYMD BCRHZ BENPR BPHCQ BTRTY BVXVI BYPQX C45 CCPQU CDBKE DAKXR EBS EEVPB EJD ENERS ERAAH EX3 FCALG FECEO FLUFQ FOEOM FOTVD FQBLK FYUFA GAUVT GJXCC H13 HLJTE HMCUK IAO KOP KSI MHKGH NOYVH NTWIH O9- OBH ODMLO OVD PAFKI PEELM PQQKQ PROAC RLZ ROX RUSNO TEORI TJX UKHRP YAYTL YKOAZ YXANX 1TH AAKAS AAPXW AAYXX ABZZY ACLDA ACZKN ADBIZ ADZCM AFBFQ AFTRI AHRYX AIZYK AJCLO AKCTQ ALKUP AOQMC CITATION IHR IPNFZ ITC JXSIZ RIG ACIJW CGR CUY CVF ECM EIF NPM 7XB 8FK K9. PQEST PQUKI PRINS 7X8 ADSXY 5PM |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c502t-556a9f495bcbcfbb7ca746361f1891d4d15fdae2c77941760d9c7652f20aba233 |
IEDL.DBID | 7X7 |
ISSN | 2332-4252 2332-4260 |
IngestDate | Thu Aug 21 18:26:40 EDT 2025 Fri Sep 05 06:21:01 EDT 2025 Mon Jun 30 04:48:45 EDT 2025 Wed Feb 19 02:31:35 EST 2025 Thu Apr 24 23:09:06 EDT 2025 Tue Jul 01 03:44:13 EDT 2025 Wed Aug 28 03:19:09 EDT 2024 |
IsDoiOpenAccess | false |
IsOpenAccess | true |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 4 |
Keywords | Flow diverter Artery Aneurysm Pericallosal |
Language | English |
LinkModel | DirectLink |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c502t-556a9f495bcbcfbb7ca746361f1891d4d15fdae2c77941760d9c7652f20aba233 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
OpenAccessLink | https://academic.oup.com/ons/article-pdf/14/4/351/25205375/opx111.pdf |
PMID | 28521024 |
PQID | 2366611961 |
PQPubID | 2046367 |
PageCount | 8 |
ParticipantIDs | pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_6057496 proquest_miscellaneous_1900839620 proquest_journals_2366611961 pubmed_primary_28521024 crossref_primary_10_1093_ons_opx111 crossref_citationtrail_10_1093_ons_opx111 oup_primary_10_1093_ons_opx111 |
ProviderPackageCode | CITATION AAYXX |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2018-04-01 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2018-04-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 04 year: 2018 text: 2018-04-01 day: 01 |
PublicationDecade | 2010 |
PublicationPlace | United States |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: United States – name: Philadelphia |
PublicationTitle | Operative neurosurgery (Hagerstown, Md.) |
PublicationTitleAlternate | Oper Neurosurg (Hagerstown) |
PublicationYear | 2018 |
Publisher | Oxford University Press Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc |
Publisher_xml | – name: Oxford University Press – name: Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc |
References | Iosif (bib22-20240909) 2016; 8 Kuhn (bib15-20240909) 2015; 7 Nossek (bib3-20240909) 2017; 35 Lehecka (bib4-20240909) 2010; 107 Lin (bib17-20240909) 2015; 7 Wakhloo (bib13-20240909) 2015; 36 Chiu (bib10-20240909) 2015; 36 Fiorella (bib18-20240909) 2009; 1 Molyneux (bib5-20240909) 2002; 360 Berg (bib19-20240909) 2015; 49 Becske (bib9-20240909) 2013; 267 Shapiro (bib21-20240909) 2014; 35 Kuhn (bib16-20240909) 2015; 8 Puri (bib2-20240909) 2015; 58 Sadasivan (bib8-20240909) 2009; 40 Martinez-Galdamez (bib1-20240909) 2015; 7 Chung (bib7-20240909) 2015; 7 Chalouhi (bib14-20240909) 2015; 122 Mut (bib20-20240909) 2012; 33 Lylyk (bib11-20240909) 2009; 64 Szikora (bib12-20240909) 2010; 31 Hui (bib6-20240909) 2011; 3 |
References_xml | – volume: 122 start-page: 1498 issue: 6 year: 2015 ident: bib14-20240909 article-title: Safety and efficacy of the Pipeline Embolization Device in 100 small intracranial aneurysms publication-title: J Neurosurg doi: 10.3171/2014.12.JNS14411 – volume: 36 start-page: 1728 issue: 9 year: 2015 ident: bib10-20240909 article-title: Long-term follow-up results following elective treatment of unruptured intracranial aneurysms with the pipeline embolization device publication-title: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A4329 – volume: 267 start-page: 858 issue: 3 year: 2013 ident: bib9-20240909 article-title: Pipeline for uncoilable or failed aneurysms: results from a multicenter clinical trial publication-title: Radiology doi: 10.1148/radiol.13120099 – volume: 64 start-page: 632 issue: 4 year: 2009 ident: bib11-20240909 article-title: Curative endovascular reconstruction of cerebral aneurysms with the pipeline embolization device: the Buenos Aires experience publication-title: Neurosurgery doi: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000339109.98070.65 – volume: 7 start-page: 634 issue: 9 year: 2015 ident: bib15-20240909 article-title: Flow diverter stents for unruptured saccular anterior circulation perforating artery aneurysms: safety, efficacy, and short-term follow-up publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011237 – volume: 49 start-page: 4 issue: 1 year: 2015 ident: bib19-20240909 article-title: Endothelialization of over- and undersized flow-diverter stents publication-title: J Biomech doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2015.10.047 – volume: 58 start-page: 267 issue: 3 year: 2015 ident: bib2-20240909 article-title: Safety, efficacy, and short-term follow-up of the use of pipeline embolization device in small (<2.5 mm) cerebral vessels for aneurysm treatment: single institution experience publication-title: Neuroradiology doi: 10.1007/s00234-015-1630-5 – volume: 7 start-page: 808 issue: 11 year: 2015 ident: bib17-20240909 article-title: Utilization of Pipeline embolization device for treatment of ruptured intracranial aneurysms: US multicenter experience publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011320 – volume: 40 start-page: 952 issue: 3 year: 2009 ident: bib8-20240909 article-title: An original flow diversion device for the treatment of intracranial aneurysms: evaluation in the rabbit elastase-induced model publication-title: Stroke doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.533760 – volume: 3 start-page: 319 issue: 4 year: 2011 ident: bib6-20240909 article-title: Microsurgical and endovascular management of pericallosal aneurysms publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/jnis.2011.004770 – volume: 33 start-page: 2010 issue: 10 year: 2012 ident: bib20-20240909 article-title: Effects of flow-diverting device oversizing on hemodynamics alteration in cerebral aneurysms publication-title: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A3080 – volume: 1 start-page: 56 issue: 1 year: 2009 ident: bib18-20240909 article-title: Curative cerebrovascular reconstruction with the pipeline embolization device: the emergence of definitive endovascular therapy for intracranial aneurysms publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/jnis.2009.000083 – volume: 31 start-page: 1139 issue: 6 year: 2010 ident: bib12-20240909 article-title: Treatment of intracranial aneurysms by functional reconstruction of the parent artery: the Budapest experience with the pipeline embolization device publication-title: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A2023 – volume: 8 start-page: 1048 issue: 10 year: 2015 ident: bib16-20240909 article-title: Endovascular reconstruction of unruptured intradural vertebral artery dissecting publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2015-012028 – volume: 360 start-page: 1267 issue: 9342 year: 2002 ident: bib5-20240909 article-title: International Subarachnoid Aneurysm Trial (ISAT) of neurosurgical clipping versus endovascular coiling in 2143 patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms: a randomised trial publication-title: Lancet doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)11314-6 – volume: 35 start-page: 727 issue: 4 year: 2014 ident: bib21-20240909 article-title: Variable porosity of the pipeline embolization device in straight and curved vessels: a guide for optimal deployment strategy publication-title: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A3742 – volume: 7 start-page: 816 issue: 11 year: 2015 ident: bib1-20240909 article-title: Pipeline endovascular device for the treatment of intracranial aneurysms at the level of the circle of Willis and beyond: multicenter experience publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011355 – volume: 107 start-page: 15 year: 2010 ident: bib4-20240909 article-title: Distal anterior cerebral artery aneurysms publication-title: Acta Neurochir Suppl doi: 10.1007/978-3-211-99373-6_3 – volume: 36 start-page: 98 issue: 1 year: 2015 ident: bib13-20240909 article-title: Surpass flow diverter in the treatment of intracranial aneurysms: a prospective multicenter study publication-title: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A4078 – volume: 7 start-page: 931 issue: 12 year: 2015 ident: bib7-20240909 article-title: Hemodynamic analysis of fast and slow aneurysm occlusions by flow diversion in rabbits publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011412 – volume: 35 start-page: 133 issue: (January 2017) year: 2017 ident: bib3-20240909 article-title: Treatment of distal anterior cerebral artery aneurysms with the pipeline embolization publication-title: J Clin Neurosci doi: 10.1016/j.jocn.2016.10.041 – volume: 8 start-page: 1283 issue: 12 year: 2016 ident: bib22-20240909 article-title: Intravascular optical coherence tomography for the evaluation of arterial bifurcations covered publication-title: J Neurointerv Surg doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2015-012084 |
SSID | ssj0001345074 |
Score | 2.1399548 |
Snippet | Abstract
BACKGROUND
Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques.
OBJECTIVE
To demonstrate the... Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques. To demonstrate the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of... BACKGROUND Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate the feasibility,... Pericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be challenging using traditional endovascular techniques.BACKGROUNDPericallosal artery aneurysm treatment may be... |
SourceID | pubmedcentral proquest pubmed crossref oup |
SourceType | Open Access Repository Aggregation Database Index Database Enrichment Source Publisher |
StartPage | 351 |
SubjectTerms | Aged Aneurysms Case Series Cerebral Angiography Corpus Callosum - blood supply Embolization Embolization, Therapeutic - instrumentation Endovascular Procedures - instrumentation Equipment Design Female Humans Hyperplasia Imaging, Three-Dimensional Intracranial Aneurysm - diagnostic imaging Intracranial Aneurysm - therapy Male Middle Aged Neurosurgery Pipelines Retrospective Studies Stents |
Title | Pipeline Embolization Device for Pericallosal Artery Aneurysms: A Retrospective Single Center Safety and Efficacy Study |
URI | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28521024 https://www.proquest.com/docview/2366611961 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1900839620 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC6057496 |
Volume | 14 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV1La9wwEBZtcumlJPTlNFlU2ksPJpasx6qXsG03hELDkjSwNyPZYxpw7O3aIfW_z8iPTbaUXHzRGBvNSPNJM_MNIZ-0joGnCkLUtQvRH7twGlt8gDSgYmcU-Grkn-fq7Er8WMrlcOFWD2mV457YbdRZlfo78mMeI9BmaC_sZPUn9F2jfHR1aKHxnOx21GVoz3qpH-5YYoFwR3T95WIeonnykaHUxMc-MFyt_jLGtnzSVp3bI7j5b9bkIzd0ukdeDviRznqF75NnUL4id4vrla8rBzq_cVUxlFbS7-C3AYqwlC66uExRVHX_MqxbOvNclm19U3-hM3oBzboayy7pJTq0Aqi_-oU1vbQ5NC21ZUbnnnHCpi31-Yfta3J1Ov_17SwcOiqEqYx4E0qprMnxTORSl-bO6dRqzxjGcjY1LBMZk3lmUXkaVce0ijKTaiV5ziPrLE7iG7JTViW8IzSPFIg8w8EIhJXcMk_0IqIMjGY5yIB8Huc0SQe6cd_1okj6sHec4Pwn_fwH5ONGdtWTbPxXaoKqeVLgcNRaMqzEOnmwm4B82AzjGvKBEVtCdVsnCIoQiRrFo4C87ZW8-QyfSn8qFgHRW-rfCHh-7u2R8vp3x9ONJ0UtjDp4-rfekxcIwqZ9NtAh2WnWt3CEQKdxk86aJ2T36_x8cXEPZqACiw |
linkProvider | ProQuest |
linkToHtml | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1Lb9QwELaq7QEuiIrXlrYYAQcOUWPHjw0SQgvdakvb1aoPqbdgJxNRKU2WTaqSP8VvZLxJtl2EeuslFzuK4xl7Ps94viHkvdYB8FiBh7K2Htpj6w0Cgw-QIajAhgpcNvLxRI3PxfcLebFG_nS5MO5aZbcnLjbqpIidj3yXBwi0GeoL-zL75bmqUS662pXQaNTiEOobPLKVnw_2UL4fON8fnX0be21VAS-WPq88KZUJUzwX2NjGqbU6NtqxZrGUDUKWiITJNDH4AxqHz7TykzDWSvKU-8Ya7hyguOWvC5fR2iPrX0eT6cmtVycQCLDEoqJdwD1cELzjRA2DXReKLma_GWMrVnAls-4OwP33nuYdw7f_lDxpESsdNiq2QdYgf0Zuppczl8kOdHRli6xN5qR74DYeikCYTheRoCwryuZlmNd06Ngz6_Kq_ESH9ASqedEletJTNKEZUOdshjk9NSlUNTV5QkeO48LENXU3Huvn5PxBZvsF6eVFDq8ITX0FIk2w0QdhJDfMUcsIP4FQsxRkn3zs5jSKW4JzV2cji5pAexDh_EfN_PfJu2XfWUPr8d9eOyiaeztsdVKL2rVfRrea2idvl824al0oxuRQXJcRwjDEvqHifp-8bIS8_AwfSHcOF32iV8S_7OAYwVdb8sufC2ZwPJtqEarN-4f1hjwanx0fRUcHk8PX5DFCwEFzF2mL9Kr5NWwjzKrsTqvblPx46OX0F0ffP2Y |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Pipeline+Embolization+Device+for+Pericallosal+Artery+Aneurysms%3A+A+Retrospective+Single+Center+Safety+and+Efficacy+Study&rft.jtitle=Operative+neurosurgery+%28Hagerstown%2C+Md.%29&rft.au=Katyucia+De+Macedo+Rodrigues&rft.au=K%C3%BChn%2C+Anna+Luisa&rft.au=Tamura%2C+Takamitsu&rft.au=Dabus%2C+Guilherme&rft.date=2018-04-01&rft.pub=Wolters+Kluwer+Health%2C+Inc&rft.issn=2332-4252&rft.eissn=2332-4260&rft.volume=14&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=351&rft.epage=358&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093%2Fons%2Fopx111 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=2332-4252&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=2332-4252&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=2332-4252&client=summon |