Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica (Oct 2022)

Usefulness of the Multimodal Fusion Image for Visualization of Deep Sylvian Veins

  • Kenta NAKASE,
  • Yasuhiro TAKESHIMA,
  • Kengo KONISHI,
  • Ryosuke MATSUDA,
  • Kentaro TAMURA,
  • Shuichi YAMADA,
  • Fumihiko NISHIMURA,
  • Ichiro NAKAGAWA,
  • Young-Soo PARK,
  • Hiroyuki NAKASE

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2176/jns-nmc.2022-0206
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 62, no. 10
pp. 475 – 482

Abstract

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The preoperative assessment of cerebral veins is important to avoid unexpected cerebral venous infarction in the neurosurgical setting. However, information is particularly limited regarding deep Sylvian veins, which occasionally disturb surgical procedures for cerebral anterior circulation aneurysms. The predictability of detecting deep Sylvian veins and their tributaries using a modern multimodal fusion image was aimed to be evaluated. Moreover, 51 patients who underwent microsurgery for unruptured cerebral aneurysms with Sylvian fissure dissection were retrospectively reviewed. The visualization of the four components of the deep Sylvian veins in conventional computed tomography (CT) venography and multimodal fusion images was evaluated. To compare the detection accuracy among these radiological images, the sensitivity and specificity for the detection of each of the four venous structures were calculated in comparison with those of intraoperative inspections. The kappa coefficients were also measured and the inter-rater agreement for each venous structure in each radiological image was examined. In all veins, the multimodal fusion image exhibited a high detection rate without statistical difference from intraoperative inspections (P = 1.0). However, CT venography exhibited a low detection rate with a significant difference from intraoperative inspections in the common vertical trunk (P = 0.006) and attached vein (P = 0.008). The kappa coefficients of the fusion image ranged from 0.73 to 0.91 and were superior to those of CT venography for all venous structures. This is the first report to indicate the usefulness of a multimodal fusion image in evaluating deep Sylvian veins, especially for the detection of nontypical, relatively small veins with large individual variability.

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