J Neurosurg. 2018 Jun;128(6):1830-1838. doi: 10.3171/2017.2.JNS162951. Epub 2017 Sep 1.
OBJECTIVE Compressive cranial nerve syndromes can be useful bedside clues to the diagnosis of an enlarging intracranial aneurysm and can also guide subsequent evaluation, as with an acute oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve [CN] III) palsy that is presumed to be a posterior communicating artery aneurysm and a surgical emergency until proven otherwise. The CN VI has a short cisternal segment from the pontomedullary sulcus to Dorello's canal, remote from most PICA aneurysms but in the hemodynamic pathway of a rupturing PICA aneurysm that projects toward Dorello's canal. The authors describe a cranial nerve syndrome for posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) aneurysms that associates subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and an isolated abducens nerve (CN VI) palsy. METHODS Clinical and radiological data from 106 surgical patients with PICA aneurysms (66 ruptured and 40 unruptured) were retrospectively reviewed. Data from a group of 174 patients with other aneurysmal SAH (aSAH) were analyzed in a similar manner to control for nonspecific effects of SAH. Univariate statistical analysis compared incidence and risk factors associated with CN VI palsy in subarachnoid hemorrhage. RESULTS Overall, 13 (4.6%) of 280 patients had CN VI palsy at presentation, and all of them had ruptured aneurysms (representing 13 [5.4%] of the 240 cases of ruptured aneurysms). CN VI palsies were observed in 12 patients with ruptured PICA aneurysms (12/66 [18.1%]) and 1 patient with other aSAH (1/174 [0.1%], p < 0.0001). PICA aneurysm location in ruptured aneurysms was an independent predictor for CN VI palsy on multivariate analysis (p = 0.001). PICA aneurysm size was not significantly different in patients with or without CN VI palsy (average size 4.4 mm and 5.2 mm, respectively). Within the PICA aneurysm cohort, modified Fisher grade (p = 0.011) and presence of a thick cisternal SAH (modified Fisher Grades 3 and 4) (p = 0.003) were predictors of CN VI palsy. In all patients with ruptured PICA aneurysms and CN VI palsy, dome projection and presumed direction of rupture were directed toward the ipsilateral and/or contralateral Dorello's canal, in agreement with laterality of the CN palsy. In patients with bilateral CN VI palsies, a medial projection with extensive subarachnoid blood was observed near bilateral canals. CONCLUSIONS This study establishes a localizing connection between an isolated CN VI palsy, SAH, and an underlying ruptured PICA aneurysm. CN VI palsy is an important clinical sign in aSAH and when present on initial clinical presentation may be assumed to be due to ruptured PICA aneurysms until proven otherwise. The deficit may be ipsilateral, contralateral, or bilateral and is determined by the direction of the aneurysm dome projection and extent of subarachnoid bleeding toward Dorello's canal, rather than by direct compression.
压迫性颅神经综合征可以作为颅内动脉瘤增大的有用床边线索,也可以指导后续评估,例如急性动眼神经(颅神经[CN] III)麻痹,推测为后交通动脉瘤,且为紧急手术,除非有其他证据。CN VI 从桥延沟到 Dorello 管有一个短的鞍内段,远离大多数 PICA 动脉瘤,但位于破裂 PICA 动脉瘤投射到 Dorello 管的血流动力学途径中。作者描述了一种与后下小脑动脉(PICA)动脉瘤相关的颅神经综合征,该综合征与蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)和孤立性展神经(CN VI)麻痹有关。
回顾性分析了 106 例 PICA 动脉瘤(66 例破裂和 40 例未破裂)手术患者的临床和影像学数据。以类似的方式分析了 174 例其他蛛网膜下腔出血(aSAH)患者的数据,以控制 SAH 的非特异性影响。单变量统计分析比较了蛛网膜下腔出血中 CN VI 麻痹的发生率和危险因素。
总体而言,280 例患者中有 13 例(4.6%)在发病时出现 CN VI 麻痹,所有患者均为破裂动脉瘤(代表 240 例破裂动脉瘤中的 13 例[5.4%])。12 例(12/66 [18.1%])破裂 PICA 动脉瘤患者和 1 例(1/174 [0.1%])其他 aSAH 患者观察到 CN VI 麻痹,差异有统计学意义(p < 0.0001)。多变量分析显示,PICA 动脉瘤破裂动脉瘤的位置是 CN VI 麻痹的独立预测因素(p = 0.001)。破裂动脉瘤患者的 PICA 动脉瘤大小无显著差异(平均大小分别为 4.4 毫米和 5.2 毫米)。在 PICA 动脉瘤组中,改良 Fisher 分级(p = 0.011)和存在厚的鞍内蛛网膜下腔出血(改良 Fisher 分级 3 级和 4 级)(p = 0.003)是 CN VI 麻痹的预测因素。在所有破裂 PICA 动脉瘤和 CN VI 麻痹的患者中,穹窿投影和破裂方向均朝向同侧和/或对侧 Dorello 管,与 CN 麻痹的侧别一致。在双侧 CN VI 麻痹的患者中,双侧管附近观察到内侧投影和广泛的蛛网膜下腔血液。
本研究确立了孤立性 CN VI 麻痹、SAH 和潜在破裂 PICA 动脉瘤之间的局部联系。CN VI 麻痹是 aSAH 的重要临床体征,在初始临床表现时存在,除非有其他证据,否则可假定为破裂 PICA 动脉瘤所致。缺陷可能是同侧、对侧或双侧,取决于动脉瘤穹窿的投影方向和向 Dorello 管的蛛网膜下腔出血程度,而不是直接压迫。