World Neurosurgery: X (Jul 2024)

Fluorescein videoangiography (FL-VAG) as a predictor of cerebral bypass patency

  • Edgar Nathal,
  • Javier Degollado-García,
  • Héctor A. Rodríguez-Rubio,
  • Alfredo Bonilla-Suástegui,
  • Alejandro Serrano-Rubio

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23
p. 100287

Abstract

Read online

Background: The fluorescein videoangiography (FL-VAG) has become a valuable adjunct tool in vascular neurosurgery. This work describes using the FL-VAG during bypass surgery and proposes a classification method for evaluating surgical results. Methods: We analyzed 26 patients with 50 cerebral bypasses from September 2018 to September 2022. We used a three grades classification method based on the pass of intravenous fluorescein through the anastomosis. Grade 1 represents the synchronous and total filling of the ''T'' shape (''green T″) formed by the donor and recipient vessel, Grade 2, the asynchronous filling of the anastomosis (incomplete/asynchronous ''green T″), and Grade 3, a non-patent anastomosis (absence of ''green T″). Results: Of the 26 patients, 8 underwent one bypass, 14 underwent double bypass, 2 underwent three bypasses, and 2 underwent four bypasses in two different interventions. The type of bypass was end-to-side anastomosis in 47 (94%) cases, internal maxillary artery to middle cerebral artery bypass with a radial artery graft (IMax-MCA anastomosis) in 2 (4%), and PICA-VA transposition in one (2%). We made 24 (48%) bypasses on the right side and 26 (52%) on the left side. After the initial surgery, thirty-nine (78%) bypasses were considered as Grade 1, 5 (10%) as Grade 2, and 6 (12%) as Grade 3. After intraoperative bypass patency assessment (IBPA), 45 (90%) of the bypasses were considered Grade 1 and remained patent on CTA. Conclusions: Using FL-VAG and a three-tier classification method is a reliable tool to predict bypass patency. It is safe, low-risk, and available worldwide.

Keywords