Posterior Circulation Aneurysms: A Critical Appraisal of a Surgical Series in Endovascular Era

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Abstract

The advent of the endovascular era has apparently decreased the role of microneurosurgery for many of the posterior circulation aneurysms. This study consists of a critical appraisal of a retrospective surgical series regarding posterior circulation aneurysms, targeted to define whether microneurosurgery still has a role for some of these. In 28 years, 157 aneurysms were surgically treated, 98 of which ruptured. The Average patient age was 56.7 ± 14.2 years, while in hemorrhagic cases, the mean Hunt-Hess score was 2.17 ± 0.8. Basilar tip, vertebral artery and proximal posterior inferior cerebellar artery were the most frequently involved sites. The treatment consisted of 128 clippings, 19 trappings, 7 wrappings, and 3 bypasses. A total exclusion was achieved in 88.5% of the aneurysms. An average follow-up of 67.1 ± 61.3 months proved no recurrences. The best results were observed in patients <65 years old who harbored small-to-regular aneurysms of the basilar tip, distal cerebellar arteries, or vertebral artery. Clipping proved to be a definitive and durable treatment for a large part of posterior circulation aneurysms, whereas bypass allows for treating aneurysms not amenable for coiling, stenting, or clipping. The present study confirms that microneurosurgery continues to have a paramount role within neurovascular pathology.

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APA

Luzzi, S., Del Maestro, M., & Galzio, R. (2021). Posterior Circulation Aneurysms: A Critical Appraisal of a Surgical Series in Endovascular Era. In Acta Neurochirurgica, Supplementum (Vol. 132, pp. 39–45). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63453-7_6

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