- Delayed Leukoencephalopathy: A Rare Complication after Coiling of Cerebral Aneurysms
Delayed leukoencephalopathy is a rare complication that occurs after endovascular coiling of cerebral aneurysms and is found in the literature with several different names, such as delayed leukoencephalopathy, delayed enhancing lesions, and delayed multiple white matter lesions. Its various suggested etiologies include granulation reaction caused by foreign body emboli from the hydrophilic coating of procedural devices, contrast-induced encephalopathy, and nickel or bioactive polyglycolic/polylactic acid coil sensitivity. The authors analyzed 1754 endovascular coiling procedures of 1594 aneurysms. Sixteen procedures demonstrated delayed leukoencephalopathy on follow-up FLAIR MR imaging examinations after a median period of 71.5 days in the form of high-signal changes in the white matter at locations remote from the coil mass. Seven patients had headaches or hemiparesis, and 9 patients were asymptomatic. All imaging-associated changes improved subsequently. They found evidence of an association between delayed leukoencephalopathy and the number of microcatheters used per procedure, along with evidence suggesting that these procedures required larger median volumes of contrast medium and weak evidence regarding the need for a longer median fluoroscopy duration.
- Artery of Davidoff and Schechter Supply in Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas
The artery of Davidoff and Schechter is a dural branch of the posterior cerebral artery that can supply the meninges close to the falcotentorial junction. It is usually not identified on angiography except when enlarged in the setting of a dural AVF or meningioma. The impact on treatment of the artery of Davidoff and Schechter supply to a fistula is not well-described in the literature. The authors' retrospective analysis of patients with dural AVFs treated at the Toronto Western Hospital between 2006 and 2018 identified 6 patients with dural AVFs receiving supply from the artery of Davidoff and Schechter (of a total of 173 patients with dural AVFs). All patients were initially treated by transarterial embolization using liquid embolic agents. Three patients required a second endovascular procedure partly due to residual supply from the artery of Davidoff and Schechter.