Dominguez Lisette, Saway Brian, Benko Michael J, Guilliams Evin, Marvin Eric A, Entwistle John J
Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education, Jacksonville, Florida, USA.
Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and Fralin Biomedical Research Institute, Roanoke, Virginia, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2020 Mar;135:2-6. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2019.10.136. Epub 2019 Nov 14.
Intracranial aneurysm formation after Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKRS) is a rare complication that has only recently been reported in the literature. We report the case of a fatal distal superior cerebellar artery (SCA) aneurysm rupture in a woman treated twice with GKRS for trigeminal neuralgia along with a review of the literature regarding radiation-induced aneurysms.
A 77-year-old white woman with a history of refractory right-sided trigeminal neuralgia treated with GKRS in 2001, and again in 2006 after a relapse, presented to our emergency department with complaints of a sudden-onset severe headache associated with vomiting, right eye vision loss, left-sided facial droop, and left-sided weakness with no history of hypertension or smoking prior to presentation. Initial head computed tomography scan without contrast demonstrated an intraparenchymal hemorrhage centered in the right middle cerebellar peduncle with subarachnoid hemorrhage in the basal cisterns and extension into the fourth ventricle causing early hydrocephalus. Head computed tomography angiography (CTA) demonstrated a distal right SCA aneurysm adjacent to the hemorrhage. The patient's mental status deteriorated into coma after suspected rerupture during the CTA requiring immediate intubation, external ventricular drain placement, and emergent cerebral angiogram with coil embolization. Ultimately, the patient never recovered despite medical and surgical management; therefore, care was withdrawn in accordance with her known wishes.
The pathophysiologic association of aneurysm formation after GKRS remains to be elucidated, but given the potentially fatal consequences of aneurysm rupture, we advocate for further research and propose serial vascular imaging during the postradiosurgery follow-up period for iatrogenic aneurysm formation surveillance.
伽玛刀放射外科治疗(GKRS)后颅内动脉瘤形成是一种罕见的并发症,最近才在文献中有所报道。我们报告了一例因三叉神经痛接受两次GKRS治疗的女性患者发生致命性小脑上动脉(SCA)远端动脉瘤破裂的病例,并对有关放射性动脉瘤的文献进行了综述。
一名77岁白人女性,有难治性右侧三叉神经痛病史,2001年接受GKRS治疗,复发后于2006年再次接受治疗。她因突发严重头痛伴呕吐、右眼视力丧失、左侧面部下垂和左侧肢体无力就诊于我们的急诊科,就诊前无高血压或吸烟史。初始头颅计算机断层扫描(CT)平扫显示脑实质内出血以右小脑桥脑脚为中心,基底池蛛网膜下腔出血并延伸至第四脑室,导致早期脑积水。头颅计算机断层血管造影(CTA)显示出血部位附近有一个右侧SCA远端动脉瘤。在CTA检查期间,患者疑似再次破裂后精神状态恶化陷入昏迷,需要立即插管、放置脑室外引流,并紧急进行脑血管造影和弹簧圈栓塞。尽管进行了药物和手术治疗,患者最终仍未康复;因此,根据她已知的意愿停止了治疗。
GKRS后动脉瘤形成的病理生理关联仍有待阐明,但鉴于动脉瘤破裂可能产生致命后果,我们主张进一步研究,并建议在放射外科治疗后的随访期间进行系列血管成像,以监测医源性动脉瘤的形成。