1Department of Neurosurgery, and.
2Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Division of Interventional Neuroradiology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta; and.
Neurosurg Focus. 2019 Dec 1;47(6):E20. doi: 10.3171/2019.9.FOCUS19653.
Intracranial aneurysms confer the risk of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), a potentially devastating condition, though most aneurysms will remain asymptomatic for the lifetime of the patient. Imaging is critical to all stages of patient care for those who harbor an unruptured intracranial aneurysm (UIA), including to establish the diagnosis, to determine therapeutic options, to undertake surveillance in patients who elect not to undergo treatment or whose aneurysm(s) portends such a low risk that treatment is not indicated, and to perform follow-up after treatment. Neuroimaging is equally as important in patients who suffer an SAH. DSA remains the reference standard for imaging of intracranial aneurysms due to its high spatial and temporal resolution. As noninvasive imaging technology, such as CTA and MRA, improves, the diagnostic accuracy of such tests continues to increasingly approximate that of DSA. In cases of angiographically negative SAH, imaging protocols are necessary not only for diagnosis but also to search for an initially occult vascular lesion, such as a thrombosed, ruptured aneurysm that might be detected in a delayed fashion. Given the crucial role of neuroimaging in all aspects of care for patients with UIAs and SAH, it is incumbent on those who care for these patients, including cerebrovascular neurosurgeons, interventional neurologists and neuroradiologists, and diagnostic radiologists and neurointensivists, to understand the role of imaging in this disease and how individual members of the multispecialty team use imaging to ensure best practices to deliver cutting-edge care to these often complex cases. This review expounds on the role of imaging in the management of UIAs and ruptured intracranial aneurysms and in the workup of angiographically negative subarachnoid hemorrhage.
颅内动脉瘤会增加蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)的风险,这是一种潜在的破坏性疾病,尽管大多数动脉瘤在患者的一生中都不会出现症状。对于那些患有未破裂颅内动脉瘤(UIA)的患者,影像学检查在患者护理的各个阶段都至关重要,包括确立诊断、确定治疗方案、对选择不进行治疗或其动脉瘤风险较低而无需治疗的患者进行监测,以及在治疗后进行随访。对于患有 SAH 的患者,神经影像学检查同样重要。由于其具有较高的空间和时间分辨率,DSA 仍然是颅内动脉瘤成像的参考标准。随着非侵入性成像技术(如 CTA 和 MRA)的不断改进,这些检查的诊断准确性继续越来越接近 DSA。在血管造影阴性的 SAH 病例中,不仅需要影像学检查来诊断,还需要寻找最初隐匿的血管病变,例如可能以延迟方式检测到的血栓形成、破裂的动脉瘤。鉴于神经影像学在 UIA 和 SAH 患者护理的各个方面都起着至关重要的作用,因此照顾这些患者的医生,包括脑血管神经外科医生、介入神经科医生和神经放射科医生以及诊断放射科医生和神经重症监护医生,都有责任了解影像学在这种疾病中的作用以及多学科团队的各个成员如何使用影像学来确保为这些经常复杂的病例提供最先进的护理。这篇综述阐述了影像学在 UIA 和破裂颅内动脉瘤的管理以及血管造影阴性蛛网膜下腔出血的检查中的作用。