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Stent-Assisted Coil Embolization of Ruptured Aneurysms in the Acute Stage: Advantages and Disadvantages.

OBJECTIVE: In the acute stage of ruptured cerebral aneurysms, limited devices are available, making the treatment difficult. We aimed to evaluate the outcomes of the coil embolization with stenting for the ruptured cerebral aneurysms in the acute stage.

METHODS: We assessed 22 cases treated with stenting among 134 of 169 consecutive patients with subarachnoid hemorrhages undergoing an endovascular treatment between April 2014 and December 2021, of which 134 underwent an embolization during the acute stage. A stent was used in the patients wherein the treatment with the balloon-assisted or double catheter technique was difficult. Stenting was performed under the loading of two or more antiplatelet agents.

RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 68.9 years, of which five were male and 14 (63.6%) had severe grade (World Federation of Neurosurgeons grade IV, V). The aneurysm site was the anterior communicating artery in four cases, internal carotid artery in nine, middle cerebral artery in two, vertebrobasilar artery in six, and posterior cerebral artery in one. The aneurysm shape was saccular in 13 cases, dissection in seven, and fusiform in two. Stents were used for wide-neck aneurysms in 12 cases, vascular preservation in seven, and rescue in three. The mean maximum diameter was 9.6 mm. The mean neck size was 6.4 mm. Complete occlusion and neck remnant were found in eight and seven cases, respectively. The perioperative complication rate was 45.5% (thromboembolism in five cases, stent occlusion in two, re-bleeding in two, and cerebral hemorrhage in one). The outcomes included modified Rankin Scale 0-2 in seven cases, 4-5 in five, and 6 in nine. Stent-related death occurred in one case. The rate of morbidity and mortality was 18.2%. Although stents were used in the acute stage of rupture, they were used for the right reasons. However, a high rate of complications occurred: two cases of re-bleeding, in which an incomplete occlusion was a factor.

CONCLUSION: Stent placement in patients with the acute ruptured cerebral aneurysms should be carefully determined and efforts should be made to reduce the embolic and hemorrhagic complications. However, it may be an effective treatment option when other options could be extremely difficult.

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