Login / Signup

Transcirculation retrograde placement of a Pipeline embolization device for treatment of a vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm.

Visish M SrinivasanChristopher Salvatore GraffeoLea ScherschinskiNeil MajmundarJoshua S CatapanoEthan A WinklerAshutosh P JadhavAndrew F DucruetMichael T LawtonFelipe C Albuquerque
Published in: Journal of neurointerventional surgery (2024)
Transcirculation catheterization, also known as the retrograde approach, involves the navigation of a catheter or other endovascular device from one arterial circulation to the other (right to left, or anterior to posterior).1-4 We present a case of a complex vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm previously treated by bilateral vertebral artery deconstruction, precluding antegrade access (video 1). Following the creation of a protective occipital artery to posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) bypass, the patient was treated with transcirculation placement of a Pipeline embolization device (PED).5-9 The right internal carotid artery was accessed with a guide catheter using a transradial approach. The microwire-microcatheter combination was then tracked through the right posterior communicating artery, down the basilar trunk, and to the left PICA. The PED was successfully deployed from the left vertebral artery to the mid-basilar artery. At 3-month follow-up, the aneurysm was completely obliterated. The nuances of transcirculation technique, especially for flow diversion, are discussed. (Used with permission from Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.)neurintsurg;jnis-2023-021363v1/V1F1V1Video 1Transcirculation retrograde placement of a Pipeline embolization device for treatment of a vertebrobasilar junction aneurysm previously treated by bilateral vertebral artery deconstruction, precluding antegrade access.
Keyphrases
  • coronary artery
  • ultrasound guided
  • internal carotid artery
  • case report
  • abdominal aortic aneurysm
  • body composition
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • combination therapy