Autor: |
Phadke, Rajendra Vishnu, Singh, Vivek, Balaguruswamy, Madan Mohan, Udiya, Alok, Shetty, Gurucharan Sunnari, Prasad, Surya Nandan, Mittal, Somit, Chauhan, Gaurav, Dhull, Vedita, Neyaz, Zafar |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Asian Journal of Neurosurgery; Oct-Dec2020, Vol. 15 Issue 4, p889-898, 10p |
Abstrakt: |
Group 2 (n = 37) included larger artery sidewall aneurysms, i.e., posterior communicating artery aneurysm (PCOM n = 9); internal carotid artery (ICA) paraophthalmic aneurysms (n = 10); anterior choroidal artery region ICA aneurysms (n = 5); ICA superior hypophyseal (n = 3) and other supraclinoid ICA aneurysms (n = 6) excluding the ICA bifurcation aneurysms; basilar artery sidewall aneurysms (n = 2); and M1 segment of middle cerebral artery sidewall aneurysms (n = 2). Getting More Out of Follow-up Three-Dimensional Time-of-Flight Magnetic Resonance Angiography in Endovascularly Treated Intracranial Aneurysms. In addition, there were bifurcation aneurysms, i.e., ICA bifurcation aneurysm (n = 3) and basilar top aneurysm (n = 1), vertebro-basilar fenestration related aneurysm (n = 1), proximal PICA n = 3, and proximal superior cerebellar artery aneurysm (n = 1). Of the seven co-existing untreated aneurysms, 3 MCA bifurcation aneurysms and 2 ICA aneurysms showed an average growth rate of 0.02 mm/month, whereas two small <3 mm aneurysms (1 DACA and 1 ICA Superior hypophyseal) showed no change in size over 12 and 25 months, respectively. [Extracted from the article] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
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