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Publications (5)12.07 Total impact

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    Article: Pathophysiological evaluation of cerecyte coil embolization for experimental broad neck aneurysms.
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    ABSTRACT: Cerecyte second-generation coils feature inner surfaces coated with an absorbable polyglycolic acid (PGA) polymer. Their use is expected to accelerate aneurysm organization, but time course data are limited. The present experimental study was therefore conducted to clarify the processes by pathological examination. Methods. Two types of experimental aneurysms were initially generated in adult mongrel dogs, one bifurcation and another of lateral wall type. Long-term persistence of each was defined by follow-up angiography for more than 1 year. Embolization of the aneurysms was then performed using only cerecyte coils, and follow-up angiography was conducted after 2 and 4 weeks followed by pathological examination. Results. Organization of both types of broad neck aneurysm was apparent 4 weeks after embolization, which is earlier as compared with already reported data for bare coils.
    ISRN neurology. 01/2012; 2012:137873.
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    Article: Endovascular surgery for very small ruptured intracranial aneurysms. Technical note.
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    ABSTRACT: Application of endovascular surgery for very small aneurysms is controversial because of technical difficulties and high complication rates. The aim in the present study was to assess treatment results in a series of such lesions at one institution. Since 1997, endovascular surgery has been advocated for very small ruptured aneurysms (< 3 mm in maximum diameter) that fulfill the criterion of a fundus/neck ratio greater than 1.5. Twenty-one patients were treated, for whom the World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies classification before treatment was Grade I in 10, Grade II in two, Grade III in two, Grade IV in five, and Grade V in two. The aneurysm location was the internal carotid artery in four, the anterior communicating artery in 11, the middle cerebral artery in one, and the vertebrobasilar system in five. In all patients, endovascular surgery was performed using Guglielmi detachable coils after induction of general anesthesia. Initially, the presumed volume of the lesions was calculated for each aneurysm. Thereafter, the appropriate coil length was decided according to the volume embolization ratio, as 30 to 40%. In all attempts to obliterate aneurysms a single coil was used. All aneurysms were completely obliterated as confirmed by postembolization angiography, without procedure-related complications. During the follow-up period only one patient needed additional coil embolization for a growing aneurysm. Final outcomes were good recovery in 15 patients, moderate disability in five, and severe disability in one. Appropriate selection of patients and coils, and use of sophisticated techniques allow a good outcome for patients with very small aneurysms.
    Journal of Neurosurgery 11/2006; 105(5):777-80. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: Efficacy of endovascular surgery for the treatment of acute epidural hematomas.
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    ABSTRACT: Recent advances in the equipment and technology for endovascular surgery have led to an increasing number of patients undergoing this procedure to treat various lesions. The purpose of this study was to investigate the efficacy of early-stage endovascular surgery to treat growing acute epidural hematomas (AEDHs). Over a period of 2.5 years, endovascular intervention was performed in nine patients with AEDHs, as shown by the extravasation of contrast medium and the recognition of growing hematomas on CT scans. Embolization was performed by using catheters superselectively advanced with a microguidewire until it reached the area just before the bleeding point. In all nine cases, bleeding from the middle meningeal artery ceased immediately after treatment, and further surgical intervention was avoided. In three of five patients with additional lesions, surgical intervention was also conducted to treat an acute subdural hematoma (two patients) or a contusion hematoma (one patient); in two cases, these lesions were located on the contralateral side. In patients with thin AEDHs in the early stage, angiography followed by endovascular intervention allows for conservative treatment. Notable clinical benefits can be achieved in patients with complicated, multiple lesions.
    American Journal of Neuroradiology 09/2004; 25(7):1177-80. · 2.93 Impact Factor
  • Article: Successful stent placement for cervical artery dissection associated with the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Case report and review of the literature.
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    ABSTRACT: This 44-year-old man with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) Type IV presented with hemiparesis and the Gerstmann syndrome. Left carotid artery (CA) angiography revealed a dissecting aneurysm with severe stenosis located in the common CA; the lesion was successfully treated with a stent graft. The patient's clinical course after endovascular surgery was uneventful, without occurrence of megacolon. The literature for spontaneous CA dissection in EDS Type IV cases is reviewed and points for investigation and treatment are discussed.
    Journal of Neurosurgery 01/2004; 99(6):1077-81. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: Preoperative superselective embolization of skull-base meningiomas: Indications and limitations
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    ABSTRACT: We evaluated the clinical significance of preoperative superselective embolization for skull-base meningiomas. The subjects consisted of 20 patients with skull-base meningiomas, and were classified into a preoperative embolized group and a non-embolized group. The volume of blood transfused during the operation, the length of the operative procedure and the neurological outcome were compared between the two groups. The results showed that, in tumors smaller than 6 cm, the blood lost during the operation was significantly less in the embolized group. In tumors larger than 6 cm, there was not difference in blood lost, perhaps because larger meningiomas tend to have tiny blood vessels that are unsuitable for preoperative embolization. There was no difference in the length of the operation between the two groups. The embolized group tended to show a better clinical outcome than the non-embolized group.
    Journal of Neuro-Oncology 09/1998; 40(1):67-71. · 3.21 Impact Factor