Flow Arrest for Complex Intracranial Aneurysm Surgery by Using Adenosine

Schematic of an A Com A aneu- rysm. The large does not circumferential dissection and visualization of the whole aneurysm, perforators


Introduction
The term complex intracranial aneurysms (CIAs) refers to aneurysm at a narrow and difficult location, difficult shape, and also giant size (aneurysm that is bigger than 25 mm in diameter) [1]. Giant aneurysms are more likely to bleed and present as subarachnoid hemorrhage, or sometimes they become partly thrombosed with ischemic brain causing mass effect with progressive symptoms or even death. Microsurgery and clip ligation can be challenging in CIAs because it is very difficult to have a panoramic view of the aneurysm, where sometimes the parent vessel is laid beneath the aneurysm, difficult to identify all branches and perforators, and also the surgical corridor could be very deep and narrow and surrounded by important neurovascular structures. During the clipping, it is important to make sure the aneurysm is well clipped to prevent injury from any perforator (Figs. 27.1, 27.2, and 27.3). Flow arrest can be induced by using adenosine; it will briefly reduce cerebral perfusion pressure  The large mass does not allow circumferential dissection and visualization of the whole aneurysm, its branches, and perforators and the tension on aneurysm, thereby facilitating the clip ligation. The lenght of time while the flow arrest will provide the surgeon to work at the aneurysm and the parts surrounding it or even reduce the bleed if it was ruptured during dissection. It will provide the time interval for the surgeon to be able to secure the neck of the aneurysm. The adenosine is working by inducing the transient asystole for a few minutes.
There are 231 cases of intracranial aneurysms which used adenosine-induced flow arrest during microsurgery and clip ligation from 1999 to 2016 (Bebawy JF et al. have three published papers; there are some repeated cases in these three papers) [2].

Adenosine-Induced Transient Asystole
The adenosine is a nucleoside analog that can reduce the heartbeat and lengthen the electric conduction at the atrioventricular node. Adenosine will bind A1 receptors in the myocard, reducing adenylate cyclase activity and reducing intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (c-AMP). This will prevent calcium conductance and then shut down pacemaker activity. Adenosine has a half-life of 0.6-10 s, and it is quickly washed out from the circulation by uptake into erythrocytes and vascular endothelial cells. Following the bolus injection, the heart rate will decrease linearly with the amount of dose until total AV node block happened. The adenosine effect will be seen 10-20 s after the bolus injection. There is a linear relationship between the dose and the length of asystole, and it reaches a plateau between 40 and 60 s at 1 mg/ kg body weight [3]. Going through the asystole, there will be a hypotension that may stay for up to 1 min. In practice, the adenosine is commonly used by the emergency physician or cardiologist to treat supraventricular tachycardia [4]. In the endovascular surgery, adenosine sometimes is used during endovascular aortic aneurysm repair [5,6]and AVM embolization [7,8].

Indications of Using Adenosine-Induced Flow Arrest for Complex Aneurysm
There are three earlier single-patient case reports during 1999-2007. The first case was reported by Groff et al. [9]; the clipping of basilar apex aneurysm was done successfully with three doses of adenosine and no complications. Nussbaum et al. [10] then reported the second case. Nussbaum and his team successfully managed the intraoperative rupture of an A Com A (anterior communicating artery) aneurysm by using adenosine bolus injection. Prior to this attempt, they have tried temporary proximal control and cottonoid tamponade, but they failed to achieve adequate hemostasis. In this case, the adenosine facilitates the successful clipping of the aneurysm. The patient recovered very well, with no deficits and no complications related to the use of adenosine. Heppner et al. [11] reported the third case; it is a giant basilar apex aneurysm. Proximal control at the basilar trunk failed to relax the dome to allow perforator visualization and clip placement. They finally decided to give three boluses of adenosine while performing the aneurysm clipping. Sadly, this case resulted in a poor outcome, but it was considered not related with the adenosine. Recently, there are ten serial cases describing adenosine role in facilitating intracranial aneurysm clipping during 2010-2016.
For CIAs clip ligation, if the aneurysm size is giant, the surgeon often finds it difficult to apply proximal control such as the case with big aneurysm at ICA bifurcation when it turns to ACA and MCA [12,13]. Many surgeons used to prepare the extracranial carotid vessel at the neck for proximal control to reduce the dome tension while clipping the aneurysm or manage the bleed if the premature rupture occurs. Nowadays, they also can combine by using balloon occlusion endovascularly and suction decompression or do the deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, but it only could be done at the hospital with complete facility [14,15]. Such combination of surgery may be associated with high morbidity rate that contributed from the dissection of friable arteries or distal arterial embolic occlusion due to endovascular manipulation. The other method is using cardiopulmonary bypass to facilitate clipping of difficult aneurysm, but there are risks of complication related to the bypass procedure such as arterial injury at the puncture site, emboli, and coagulopathy causing high number of postoperative intracranial hematomas [16]. If the proximal control is unfeasible for the case, then the use of adenosine may induce a short-time deep systemic hypotension with flow arrest to the parent artery [9,11,17]. The studies have shown that 57 (24.7%) of 231 patients got adenosine during posterior circulation clipping, which include 25(10.8%) basilar artery aneurysm and 29(12.55%) unsorted posterior circulation aneurysm. This supports the fact that the surgeries in this area are generally more difficult, with deep and narrow corridor; thus they are technically more challenging [3,9,11,18,19] . Some studies [3,9,11,19,20] have pointed out that proximal control by using temporary clip remains the gold standard. The use of adenosine should be an adjunct and optional, while it's necessary during the surgery, it should not be a replacement of the temporary clip occlusion.

Adenosine-Induced Flow Arrest
Since the first successful use of adenosine to facilitate the clipping of difficult unruptured basilar apex aneurysm by Groff et al. [9], it has gained its popularity among neurosurgeons who were trying to do the complex aneurysm surgery. Early surgery after the aneurysm rupture may have a higher incidence of premature rupture prior to clipping, and the surgical field sometimes so dirty by the subarachnoid blood causes difficulty to get the proximal and distal of the parent vessel. When the premature rupture happened, it is useful if the surgeon can get the blood to stop briefly and work fast to dissect the parent artery for the proximal control. The adenosine may provide long enough time to allow definitive clipping or readjust the clip position on the rupture site or trapping aneurysm with temporary clips.

Patient Selection
Adenosine is contraindicated for the patient with severe (>80%) left main coronary artery stenosis, severe multivessel disease (three vessels or grafts with >80% stenosis), AV block (sick sinus syndrome), or who is using pacemakers. It is also contraindicated to severe asthma, symptomatic asthma, and active perioperative wheezing due to the risk of bronchoconstriction.
Patient have to be carefully examined prior to surgery, including screen for cardiac function and coronary artery disease, cardiac valve, any irregular heartbeat, and cardiac conduction abnormalities.
In terms of the dose, because individual responses to adenosine vary, different patients may need different doses of adenosine [21].We recommend we should establish an individual dose-response relationship for each patient by injecting escalating doses of adenosine.

Advantages of Adenosine-Induced Transient Asystole
1. When the blood flow stops temporarily to the parent artery, it helps in reducing tension in aneurysm and facilitating aneurysm dissection, minimizes premature rupture risk, and provides safe clip placement. 2. Adenosine has a short half-life and the circulation will be back to normal. 3. Adenosine can be given repeatedly after the patient recovers from the first dose.

Potential Risks: Complications of Adenosine-Induced Transient Asystole
There is 2.6% incidence of transient irregular heartbeat during recovery period [2]. One of them required intraoperative amiodarone injection to convert to sinus rhythm [3]. Troponin 1 elevation has been reported with an incidence of 1.73% [3,19]; all of them are clinically asymptomatic in the postoperative care unit. The adenosine is quickly metabolized and excreted from the body, but multiple bolus injection has been associated with a prolonged hypotension; it was reported that the multiple injection is used to control the premature aneurysm rupture [2]. The general agreement is to wait for complete hemodynamic return to get back to normal before giving another bolus injection.

Expert Opinion
There is still no general consensus about adenosine dose and how fast it should be given in every bolus injection. It is best to always prepare all necessary checks for the patient that is going to have complex aneurysm surgery. It includes the coronary vessel, heart conductivity study, its valve, and other comorbid condition such as asthma. It is very important if the surgeon is going to use the adenosine if other efforts for proximal control fail. Authors recommend that adenosine should be available all the time in the operating room and it should be used judiciously if the proximal control fails, is unsafe, or is difficult.
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