STA-MCA Bypass as a “Bridge” to Pituitary Surgery in a Patient with an Adenoma Occluding the Internal Carotid Artery: Case Report and Review of the Literature
Luigi A. Lanterna, Carlo Brembilla, Antonio Signorelli, Paolo Gritti, Emanuele Costi, Gianluigi Dorelli, Claudio Bernucci

TL;DR
A patient with a pituitary tumor blocking a brain artery had a bypass surgery before tumor removal to prevent stroke.
Contribution
A two-step approach using STA-MCA bypass followed by tumor removal is proposed for pituitary adenoma with ICA occlusion.
Findings
STA-MCA bypass successfully revascularized the ischemic hemisphere before tumor removal.
The patient had no further ischemic events after the combined treatment.
A two-step strategy may be valuable when stroke risk is high due to ICA occlusion.
Abstract
Occlusion of the intracranial internal carotid artery (ICA) by a pituitary adenoma with resulting cerebral ischemia is a very rare but devastating occurrence. The authors present a case in which a condition of symptomatic ICA occlusion due to a giant pituitary adenoma was successfully treated using a preliminary extraintracranial bypass as a “bridge” to the tumor removal. A 52-year-old patient presented with a minor stroke followed by pressure-dependent transient ischemic attacks consistent with a condition of hypoperfusion. MR imaging and a digital subtraction angiography revealed a pituitary adenoma occluding the ICA on the right side. He underwent a superficial temporal artery to middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) bypass with the aim of revascularizing the ischemic hemisphere and reducing the risk of perioperative stroke or stroke evolution. The patient was subsequently operated on to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntracranial Aneurysms: Treatment and Complications · Cerebrovascular and Carotid Artery Diseases · Pituitary Gland Disorders and Treatments
