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The widespread adoption of preoperative embolization in highly vascularized brain tumors often involves the frequent use of Embosphere (Merit Medical Systems, South Jordan, Utah, USA). Nevertheless, inconsistency in size selection and dilution rates across different institutions requires comprehensive examination. This study explored the appropriate size and dilution rate of Embosphere microspheres. To assess catheter occlusion and Embosphere breakage, various dilutions (4-, 10-, 20-, 30-, and 60-fold) of Embosphere 300-500 and 500-700 μm were injected into the catheter in vitro. Results indicated that 20-fold or higher dilutions of Embosphere 300-500 μm and 30-fold or higher dilutions of Embosphere 500-700 μm showed no occlusion of the Excelsior SL-10 microcatheter (Stryker, Fremont, CA, USA) or Embosphere breakage. For embolization, to reduce the risk of Excelsior SL-10 occlusion further, a 30-fold dilution of Embosphere 300-500 μm and a 60-fold dilution of Embosphere 500-700 μm were employed. For 195 blood vessels in 107 patients (84 with meningioma and 23 with schwannoma), embolization was carried out using a 30-fold dilution of Embosphere 300-500 μm when the provocative test was negative and a 60-fold dilution of Embosphere 500-700 μm when the test was positive or when there was a risk of migration into neurotrophic vessels. Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging after embolization revealed a reduced enhancement effect in 69.1% of cases. Embolization using a 30-fold dilution of Embosphere 300-500 μm and a 60-fold dilution of Embosphere 500-700 μm with an Excelsior SL-10 catheter is safe and satisfactory, which minimizes microcatheter occlusion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2176/jns-nmc.2024-0059 | DOI Listing |
No Shinkei Geka
July 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Medical University.
Preoperative embolization of brain tumors has been reported to be useful in reducing blood loss during resection, softening the tumor, and shortening the operation time by occluding blood-rich tumor nutrient vessels. This applies to skull base tumors, which are deep and difficult to expand in the operative field. Cerebellopontine angle tumors often have the petrosal branch of the middle dural artery, ascending pharyngeal artery, meningohypophyseal trunk, and inferolateral trunk as feeding vessels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol Med Chir (Tokyo)
January 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Medical University.