RISK OF ANEURYSMAL RUPTURE

Author:

Ohshima Tomotaka1,Miyachi Shigeru1,Hattori Ken-ichi2,Takahashi Ichiro3,Ishii Katsuya3,Izumi Takashi1,Yoshida Jun1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Ogaki Municipal Hospital, Gifu, Japan

3. Department of Computational Science and Engineering, Nagoya University Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya, Japan

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE The aim of the present study was to clarify the risk of rupture in terminal-type intracranial aneurysms using computational flow simulation analysis. METHODS First, idealized three-dimensional aneurysmal models were built from a solid voxel on the computer. We focused on round terminal-type aneurysms with the positioning of the neck orifice set according to the following three patterns in relationship to the axis of the parent artery: the Type-A neck orifice was positioned directly in line with the flow of the parent artery; the Type-B neck orifice was shifted 1.5 mm offline toward the unilateral branch; and the Type-C neck orifice was shifted 3 mm offline. Computational flow simulations were applied with Fujitsu α-Flow software (Fujitusu, Tokyo, Japan). We analyzed flow patterns using modified patient-specific models. We also investigated actual clinical situations to evaluate the differences in neck-orifice positioning between 20 ruptured aneurysms and 26 unruptured ones using three-dimensional angiograms. RESULTS The Type-A neck orifice showed completely symmetrical stream lines in the aneurysm, whereas the Type-C orifice showed a clear round circulation. The Type-B neck orifice, on the other hand, exhibited intra-aneurysmal flow separation. The clinical research demonstrated that Type-B aneurysms were more likely to be found in the ruptured group (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION Flow separation, recognized as one of the causes of intimal injury, could be observed only in Type-B aneurysms, a result that corresponded well with our clinical experience. From the flow-dynamics point of view, this positioning of the neck orifice may be one of the risk factors most likely to induce the rupture of unruptured aneurysms.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

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