Secondary Benefits of Microsurgical Intervention on the Vertebral Artery (V1 Segment) for Refractory Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency: Alleviation of Parkinsonism-Like Symptoms.

World neurosurgery 2024 Vol.187() p. e551-e559

Cekic E, Surme MB, Akbulut F, Ozturk R, Ustun ME

Abstract

[OBJECTIVE] The objective of this study was to investigate the outcomes of microneurosurgical interventions on V1 segment of the vertebral artery in patients with refractory vertebrobasilar insufficiency (VBI) due to dolicoarteriopathy and external compressions and to assess the secondary benefits of Parkinsonism-like symptoms.

[METHODS] Retrospective analysis encompassed 101 patients treated for vertebral artery dolicoarteriopathy or compression-related refractory VBI from 2016 to 2023. Of these, 16 patients exhibited drug-resistant Parkinsonism-like symptoms. The diagnostic evaluation included cerebral computed tomography/magnetic resonance angiography or digital subtraction angiography and brain computed tomography or magnetic resonance perfusion studies, corroborated by preoperative and 6- and 12-month postoperative Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale Part 3 assessments. Data were analyzed through Turkey's "E-nabız" system, employing Stata16 for statistical scrutiny.

[RESULTS] A significant reduction in Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale scores was observed (preoperative: 26.75±10.91; 6 months: 23.09±9.24; 12 months: 22.5±8.73; P < 0.001). Postoperative follow-up denoted that 43.7% of patients ceased medication and 50% reduced antiparkinsonian drugs. The microneurosurgical approach resulted in complete remission of VBI-related symptoms in 84.6% of patients, with the rest showing partial or marked improvement. At 6 months postoperation, perfusion studies revealed posterior border zone or cerebellar perfusion enhancements in 81% (13 out of 16) of patients, with full symptom resolution, while the remaining 19% (3 out of 16) showed partial perfusion and clinical improvements, particularly in regions supplied by the posterior cerebellar artery or posterior inferior cerebellar artery. The absence of operative mortality and minimal transient morbidities underscored the procedure's safety.

[CONCLUSIONS] Microneurosurgery for vertebral artery anomalies in refractory VBI patients, particularly those with concomitant parkinsonian-like syndromes, has demonstrated potential in symptom remission and medication reduction.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 Vertebrobasilar scispacy 1
해부 Parkinsonism-Like scispacy 1
해부 cerebral scispacy 1
해부 brain scispacy 1
해부 E-nabız scispacy 1
합병증 vertebrobasilar insufficiency scispacy 1
약물 dolicoarteriopathy scispacy 1
약물 [OBJECTIVE] scispacy 1
약물 [RESULTS] A scispacy 1
약물 antiparkinsonian scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] scispacy 1
약물 parkinsonian-like scispacy 1
질환 vertebrobasilar insufficiency C0042568
Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency
scispacy 1
질환 VBI → vertebrobasilar insufficiency C0042568
Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency
scispacy 1
질환 Parkinsonism-like symptoms scispacy 1
질환 compression-related scispacy 1
질환 Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson scispacy 1
질환 vertebral artery anomalies C0265343
Jarcho-Levin syndrome
scispacy 1
질환 parkinsonian-like syndromes scispacy 1
질환 Parkinson's Disease scispacy 1
질환 VBI patients scispacy 1
기타 vertebral artery scispacy 1
기타 patients scispacy 1
기타 Parkinsonism-like scispacy 1
기타 Stata16 scispacy 1
기타 posterior border zone scispacy 1
기타 cerebellar scispacy 1
기타 posterior cerebellar artery scispacy 1
기타 posterior inferior cerebellar artery scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Humans; Male; Female; Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency; Middle Aged; Microsurgery; Retrospective Studies; Aged; Vertebral Artery; Treatment Outcome; Parkinsonian Disorders; Neurosurgical Procedures; Adult