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[Clipping of aneurysm arising from the posterior communicating artery itself by contralateral craniotomy: a case report].
No Shinkei Geka. 1994 Jun; 22(6):553-6.NS

Abstract

A case of aneurysm arising from the posterior communicating artery itself clipped by contralateral frontotemporal craniotomy (pterional approach) is presented. A 65-year-old female developed sudden severe headache and chest pain in January of 1993. Neurological examination on admission revealed consciousness disturbance such as stupor and nuchal stiffness. CT-scan showed marked subarachnoid hemorrhage. She also suffered from acute myocardial ischemia and cardiac failure. Cerebral angiograms after recovery from cardiac dysfunction demonstrated three saccular aneurysms arising from the dilated right posterior communicating artery itself, the junction of the left internal carotid artery and the posterior communicating artery, and the bifurcation of the left middle cerebral artery. The left IC-PC junction aneurysm was thought to be ruptured because of its size and contour, so left frontotemporal craniotomy was undertaken. By the left pterional approach, successful clipping of all three aneurysms involving the one arising from the contralateral posterior communicating artery was achieved. The aneurysm at the posterior communicating artery itself was found to arise from the non-branching site and to project inferiorly, thus the successful clipping through the prechiasmal cistern could be performed without compromising any small perforating arteries.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Neurosurgery, Saga Medical School.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Case Reports
Journal Article

Language

jpn

PubMed ID

8015676

Citation

Koga, H, et al. "[Clipping of Aneurysm Arising From the Posterior Communicating Artery Itself By Contralateral Craniotomy: a Case Report]." No Shinkei Geka. Neurological Surgery, vol. 22, no. 6, 1994, pp. 553-6.
Koga H, Tsuji T, Tabuchi K. [Clipping of aneurysm arising from the posterior communicating artery itself by contralateral craniotomy: a case report]. No Shinkei Geka. 1994;22(6):553-6.
Koga, H., Tsuji, T., & Tabuchi, K. (1994). [Clipping of aneurysm arising from the posterior communicating artery itself by contralateral craniotomy: a case report]. No Shinkei Geka. Neurological Surgery, 22(6), 553-6.
Koga H, Tsuji T, Tabuchi K. [Clipping of Aneurysm Arising From the Posterior Communicating Artery Itself By Contralateral Craniotomy: a Case Report]. No Shinkei Geka. 1994;22(6):553-6. PubMed PMID: 8015676.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - [Clipping of aneurysm arising from the posterior communicating artery itself by contralateral craniotomy: a case report]. AU - Koga,H, AU - Tsuji,T, AU - Tabuchi,K, PY - 1994/6/1/pubmed PY - 1994/6/1/medline PY - 1994/6/1/entrez SP - 553 EP - 6 JF - No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery JO - No Shinkei Geka VL - 22 IS - 6 N2 - A case of aneurysm arising from the posterior communicating artery itself clipped by contralateral frontotemporal craniotomy (pterional approach) is presented. A 65-year-old female developed sudden severe headache and chest pain in January of 1993. Neurological examination on admission revealed consciousness disturbance such as stupor and nuchal stiffness. CT-scan showed marked subarachnoid hemorrhage. She also suffered from acute myocardial ischemia and cardiac failure. Cerebral angiograms after recovery from cardiac dysfunction demonstrated three saccular aneurysms arising from the dilated right posterior communicating artery itself, the junction of the left internal carotid artery and the posterior communicating artery, and the bifurcation of the left middle cerebral artery. The left IC-PC junction aneurysm was thought to be ruptured because of its size and contour, so left frontotemporal craniotomy was undertaken. By the left pterional approach, successful clipping of all three aneurysms involving the one arising from the contralateral posterior communicating artery was achieved. The aneurysm at the posterior communicating artery itself was found to arise from the non-branching site and to project inferiorly, thus the successful clipping through the prechiasmal cistern could be performed without compromising any small perforating arteries. SN - 0301-2603 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/8015676/[Clipping_of_aneurysm_arising_from_the_posterior_communicating_artery_itself_by_contralateral_craniotomy:_a_case_report]_ L2 - https://medlineplus.gov/brainaneurysm.html DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -