Comparison of microcatheter and pressure wire for venous sinus manometric evaluation of patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension

Background Venous sinus manometry performed by microcatheter to assess candidacy for venous sinus stenting in patients with idiopathic cranial pressure (IIH) can be tiring, time-consuming and unreliable. Pressure wire is widely used to measure coronary pressure and evaluate coronary stenosis severit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Interventional neuroradiology 2023-08, Vol.29 (4), p.408-412
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Sujie, Tong, Xu, Li, Xiaoqing, Liu, Lian, Liu, Zhenqiang, Mo, Dapeng, Wang, Yilong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Venous sinus manometry performed by microcatheter to assess candidacy for venous sinus stenting in patients with idiopathic cranial pressure (IIH) can be tiring, time-consuming and unreliable. Pressure wire is widely used to measure coronary pressure and evaluate coronary stenosis severity, but venous sinus manometry using the pressure guide wire has only been reported in one case, and few studies have examined the accuracy of this approach. Objective To compare venous manometry performed by microcatheter with by pressure wire under awake setting in patients with IIH. Methods The manometry results of 30 patients with IIH were recorded by Rebar-27 microcatheter and a pressure wire under awake setting. The mean venous pressures (MVPs) and trans-stenosis pressure gradients were obtained and compared between microcatheter and pressure wire. Paired t-test) were used to evaluate the data between the two groups. Results MVPs in superior sagittal sinus (SSS) and torcula were slightly higher with microcatheter, though without statistically significant differences (p > 0.05). MVPs in transverse sinus (TS) and sigmoid sinus (SS) were significantly higher with microcatheter (p 
ISSN:1591-0199
2385-2011
2385-2011
DOI:10.1177/15910199221096679