Microsurgical treatment of pediatric intracranial aneurysms: long-term angiographic and clinical outcomes.
Document Type
Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pediatric aneurysms are rare and complex to treat. Long-term angiographic and clinical data after microsurgical or endovascular therapies are lacking.
OBJECTIVE: To study the clinical and radiographic outcomes in aneurysms in pediatric patients treated with microsurgery.
METHODS: Between 1989 and 2005, 48 patients
RESULTS: Seventy-two aneurysms were treated. Presentations included incidental aneurysm (35%), aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (17%), stroke (13%), and traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage (10%). Location was anterior circulation in 76% and posterior circulation in 24%. Twenty-eight (39%) were fusiform/dissecting, and 16 (23%) were giant. Most aneurysms were clipped directly. A vascular bypass with parent-vessel occlusion was used to treat 13 aneurysms (18%). Hypothermic circulatory arrest was used to treat 10 aneurysms (14%), all involving the basilar artery. The perioperative morbidity rate was 25%. There were no deaths. The long-term morbidity rate was 14%, and the mortality rate was 3%. Clinical outcome was favorable in 92% and 94% at discharge and follow-up, respectively (mean, 59 months; median, 32 months). At angiographic follow-up (mean, 53 months; median, 32 months), the annual recurrence rate was 2.6%, and the annual rate of de novo formation or growth was 7.8%.
CONCLUSION: Pediatric aneurysms require complex microsurgical techniques to achieve favorable outcomes. They leave higher rates of recurrence and de novo formation or growth than their adult counterparts, which mandates lifelong follow-up.
Medical Subject Headings
Accidents, Traffic; Adolescent; Age Factors; Aortic Dissection; Cerebral Angiography; Child; Child, Preschool; Craniocerebral Trauma; Databases, Factual; Female; Glasgow Outcome Scale; Humans; Infant; Intracranial Aneurysm; Male; Microsurgery; Nervous System Diseases; Neurosurgical Procedures; Pregnancy; Prospective Studies; Recurrence; Sex Factors; Treatment Outcome
Publication Date
8-1-2010
Publication Title
Neurosurgery
ISSN
1524-4040
Volume
67
Issue
2
First Page
237
Last Page
249
PubMed ID
20539250
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1227/01.NEU.0000371727.71991.64
Recommended Citation
Kakarla, Udaya K; Beres, Elisa J; Ponce, Francisco A; Chang, Steven W; Deshmukh, Vivek R; Bambakidis, Nicholas C; Zabramski, Joseph M; and Spetzler, Robert F, "Microsurgical treatment of pediatric intracranial aneurysms: long-term angiographic and clinical outcomes." (2010). Neurosurgery. 2074.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurosurgery/2074