Tournade A, Courtheoux P, Sengel C, Ozgulle S, Tajahmady T
Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology, Hôpitaux Civils de Colmar, Hôpital Pasteur, Colmar, France.
Radiology. 1997 Feb;202(2):481-6. doi: 10.1148/radiology.202.2.9015078.
To evaluate endovascular treatment of saccular intracranial aneurysms with mechanical detachable spiral coils.
Fifty-three patients with 56 saccular aneurysms underwent endovascular treatment with spiral coils. All but five had symptomatic subarachnoid hemorrhage staged according to the Hunt and Hess classification as follows: stage IV or V (n = 20), stage III (n = 10), stage I or II (n = 20), and stage 0 (asymptomatic [n = 6]).
Forty-seven aneurysms were occluded (100% occlusion) on follow-up angiograms with the following time distribution: 24 months for six aneurysms (six patients), 12 months for 14 aneurysms (11 patients), 6 months for 13 aneurysms (13 patients), 4 months for four aneurysms (four patients), and only immediate postprocedure study for 16 aneurysms (16 patients) (excludes two deaths and one failure).
In this relatively small group, endovascular treatment with mechanical detachable spiral coils had a success rate of 90%, and it appears to be a rapid, reliable, and relatively safe technique in the treatment of life-threatening subarachnoid hemorrhage.