Nicola Limbucci
University of Florence
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Featured researches published by Nicola Limbucci.
Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2012
Arturo Consoli; Sergio Nappini; Leonardo Renieri; Nicola Limbucci; Fabrizio Ricciardi; Salvatore Mangiafico
Purpose Neurosurgical and endovascular treatment of fragile and recurrent aneurysms of the non-branching portion of the internal carotid artery, known as blister-like aneurysms, is challenging. The aim of this paper is to describe two cases of ruptured blister-like aneurysms of the internal carotid artery and of the vertebral artery at the origin of the postero-inferior cerebellar artery, which were both treated with flow diverter (FD) stents. Methods Two patients with a sub-arachnoid hemorrhage secondary to the rupture of a blister-like aneurysm were treated with a Pipeline (ev3, Irvine, California, USA) stent. Digital subtraction angiography and clinical follow-up were carried out. Results Both patients treated with FD stents had an excellent clinical (modified Rankin Scale, mRS 0) and angiographic outcome. In both cases the aneurysms were completely excluded after 6 months. Conclusions Although the use of this endovascular approach is still debated because of poor experience and pharmacological limitations, FD stents may represent a valid alternative approach for treatment of this aneurysm subtype.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2013
A. Consoli; Leonardo Renieri; S. Nappini; Nicola Limbucci; Salvatore Mangiafico
SUMMARY: Brain AVMs are a rare cause of cerebral hemorrhage and SAH, and their treatment is still debated. The aim of this study was to describe a novel endovascular approach with transvenous embolization of deep hemorrhagic brain AVMs. Five patients (3 females, 2 males; mean age, 33.2 years) underwent a transvenous embolization of a deep hemorrhagic brain AVM at our institution between February and April 2012. Clinical and angiographic data at the end of the procedure and after 6 months are reported. All the AVMs were completely obliterated, and no intra- or postprocedural complications occurred. The clinical outcome was unchanged or improved in all patients. Transvenous endovascular treatment may be considered in small, hemorrhagic, and deep AVMs with single deep drainage in those cases in which neurosurgical and radiosurgical treatment might not be indicated.
Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2016
Arturo Consoli; Chiara Vignoli; Leonardo Renieri; Andrea Rosi; Ivano Chiarotti; Sergio Nappini; Nicola Limbucci; Salvatore Mangiafico
Background and purpose Assisted coiling with stents or balloons enables a higher percentage of complete occlusions of saccular unruptured intracranial aneurysms to be achieved with a reasonable complication rate. The aim of this study was to compare stent-assisted coiling and the balloon remodeling technique in terms of efficacy, stability, and safety for the treatment of comparable unruptured saccular intracranial aneurysms. Materials and methods 268 patients with 286 saccular unruptured wide-necked intracranial aneurysms were treated at our institution with stent- or balloon-assisted coiling and retrospectively reviewed. Statistical analysis was performed to assess significant differences between the two groups. Results The rate of complete occlusion at the end of the procedure was higher with stent-assisted coiling than with balloon-assisted coiling (86.8% vs 78%) and the same results were also observed after 6 months (92.1% vs 77.6%; p=0.05). About 50% of major recurrences occurred in large to giant aneurysms (p<0.001). The overall complication rate was similar in the stent-assisted and balloon-assisted groups (10.3% vs 9.3%). Independently of the technique, a higher complication rate was observed with bifurcational aneurysms, particularly in the middle cerebral artery (p=0.016). Conclusions Stent-assisted coiling achieved better results in terms of complete occlusion and stability than balloon-assisted coiling with a lower rate of recurrence without being associated with a higher risk of intraprocedural complications. Bifurcational and large to giant aneurysms were associated with higher complication rates and higher recurrence rates, respectively, and still represent a challenge for both techniques.
Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2016
Nicola Limbucci; Leonardo Renieri; Sergio Nappini; Arturo Consoli; Andrea Rosi; Salvatore Mangiafico
Background Y-stent assisted coiling has been proposed for the treatment of wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms, but there are many technical variations. We report our single-center experience of Y-stent assisted coiling of bifurcation aneurysms with the closed cell Enterprise stent in order to evaluate the safety and long-term results of this technique. The literature on Y-stenting and its hemodynamic effects are reviewed. Methods Fifty-two consecutive patients with wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms underwent Y-stent assisted coiling with two Enterprise stents. The procedure was completed in 48 cases (92.3%) and technical failure occurred in 4 cases (7.3%). Cases performed with other stents were excluded. All procedures were performed under double antiplatelet therapy. Periodic clinical and neuroradiological follow-up was performed. Results Mean neuroradiological follow-up time was 26 months. Complete immediate occlusion was obtained in 87.5% of patients. Two remnants had regrown at follow-up and were recoiled, achieving complete occlusion. The late neuroradiological occlusion rate was: complete occlusion 93.6%, neck remnant 4.3%, sac remnant 2.1%. No in-stent stenosis was detected at follow-up. Among the 48 procedures, two complications occurred (4.2%). Mortality was 2.1%. No delayed ischemic stroke occurred. Conclusions Y-stent assisted coiling has a high immediate occlusion rate and very good long-term stability. The procedure is relatively safe, although the complication and mortality rates are not negligible. Two Enterprise stents can be safely used for Y-stenting and, indeed, offer the advantage of easier catheterization, delivery and deployment into distal and tortuous vessels than open cell stents.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2015
Leonardo Renieri; Nicola Limbucci; Arturo Consoli; Andrea Rosi; Sergio Nappini; Flavio Giordano; Lorenzo Genitori; Salvatore Mangiafico
The treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in children has always been a challenge for interventionalists, neurosurgeons, and radiosurgeons. Endovascular embolization is usually performed through transarterial access, but in selected cases the transvenous approach can be considered. The authors of this report aimed to evaluate the efficacy of transvenous embolization in very selected pediatric cases. They describe 4 children treated using transvenous embolization for AVMs that were small, had a single drainage vein, and were deeply located or had a difficult arterial access. The 6-month angiographic and clinical follow-ups are reported as well. In all cases, complete occlusion of the AVM was achieved with no side effects for the patient. Transvenous embolization may represent a promising alternative therapeutic option in very selected cases.
Interventional Neuroradiology | 2014
Salvatore Mangiafico; Valentina Saia; Patrizia Nencini; Ilaria Romani; Vanessa Palumbo; Giovanni Pracucci; Arturo Consoli; Andrea Rosi; Leonardo Renieri; Sergio Nappini; Nicola Limbucci; Domenico Inzitari; Gian Franco Gensini
Identification of patients with acute ischaemic stroke who could most benefit from arterial recanalization after endovascular treatment remains an unsettled issue. Although several classifications of collateral circulation have been proposed, the clinical role of collaterals is still debated. We evaluated the effect of the collateral circulation in relation to recanalization as a predictor of clinical outcome. Data were prospectively collected from 103 patients consecutively treated for proximal middle cerebral or internal carotid artery occlusion. The collateral circulation was evaluated with a novel semiquantitative-qualitative score, the Careggi collateral score (CCS), in six grades. Both CCS and recanalization grades (TICI) were analysed in relation to clinical outcome. A statistical analysis was performed to evaluate the effect of interaction between recanalization and collateral circulation on clinical outcome. Out of the 103 patients, 37 (36.3%) had poor collaterals, and 65 (63.7%) had good collaterals. Patients with good collaterals had lower basal National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), more distal occlusion, smaller lesions at 24h CT scan and better functional outcome. After multivariate analysis, the interaction between recanalization and collateral grades was significantly stronger as a predictor of good outcome (OR 6.87, 95% CI 2.11–22.31) or death (OR 4.66, 95% CI 1.48–14.73) compared to the effect of the single variables. Collaterals showed an effect of interaction with the recanalization grade in determining a favourable clinical outcome. Assessment of the collateral circulation might help predict clinical results after recanalization in patients undergoing endovascular treatment for acute ischaemic stroke.
Interventional Neuroradiology | 2014
Nicola Limbucci; Sergio Nappini; Leonardo Renieri; Arturo Consoli; Andrea Rosi; Giovanni Grillea; Marcello Bartolo; Salvatore Mangiafico
Endovascular treatment of wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms is challenging and often requires adjunctive techniques and devices. We report our experience with the hybrid Y stenting with the waffle-cone technique, combining Y stent-assisted coiling and waffle-cone stenting techniques. This approach has been described only in a single case report using a combination of open and closed cell stents. We describe four cases treated by hybrid Y stenting with the waffle-cone procedure with a variation from the originally reported technique, consisting in deploying two closed cell stents. All patients were successfully treated without complications. We propose hybrid Y stenting with the waffle-cone for the treatment of wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms as a bailout technique after failure of Y stent-assisted coiling.
Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2014
Arturo Consoli; Giulia Scarpini; Andrea Rosi; Leonardo Renieri; Ivano Chiarotti; Chiara Vignoli; Iacopo Ciampa; Sergio Nappini; Nicola Limbucci; Salvatore Mangiafico
Background Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are a rare pathology, and their treatment is discussed. The development of techniques and materials in endovascular, radiosurgical, and neurosurgical fields led to higher rates of complete occlusions and good clinical outcomes. Materials and methods 84 patients (52 men, 32 women; mean age 38.2 years; range, 9–70 years) were treated at our institution with Onyx18 from 2001 to 2011. Patients treated with other embolic agents, with micro-AVMs, were not included in the analysis. Results Complete occlusion was achieved in 27/84 patients (32.2%), in 40/84 (47.6%) brain AVMs occlusion of 80–90% of the nidus was obtained, and in 17/84 (20.3%) cases <80% of the nidus was occluded. Intraprocedural adverse events occurred in 11/84 patients (13.1%), and overall mortality and disabling permanent morbidity were 2.3% (2/84) and 4.7% (4/84), respectively. Conclusions Endovascular treatment may be considered a safe and effective approach in superficial small brain AVMs in addition to surgery, mostly in ruptured AVMs. The therapeutic strategy should be to cure small and medium AVMs with endovascular treatment alone or combined treatment. Large unruptured AVMs (Spetzler–Martin grades IV–V) should be treated with target embolization of high flow fistulas or intranidal aneurysms.
Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2016
Nicola Limbucci; Giuseppe Spinelli; Sergio Nappini; Leonardo Renieri; Arturo Consoli; Andrea Rosi; Salvatore Mangiafico
Endovascular management of maxillary arteriovenous malformation (AVMs) can be complex. Transarterial, transvenous, and direct puncture embolization has been described. The authors report the case of a 9-year-old girl with a hemorrhagic maxillary AVM, which has been treated by transvenous embolization after failure of transarterial embolization. The venous pouch was catheterized with a detachable tip microcatheter and occluded by slow Onyx injection. Onyx filled the pouch and retrogradely reached some arterial feeders, achieving complete occlusion. Bleeding episode ceased and at 6 months follow-up no recurrence was found. Maxillary AVMs can be successfully treated by transvenous Onyx embolization.
Neurosurgery | 2018
Adam A. Dmytriw; Nimer Adeeb; Ashish Kumar; Christoph J. Griessenauer; Kevin Phan; Christopher S. Ogilvy; Paul M. Foreman; Hussain Shallwani; Nicola Limbucci; Salvatore Mangiafico; Caterina Michelozzi; Timo Krings; Vitor Mendes Pereira; Charles C. Matouk; Yuchen Zhang; Mark R. Harrigan; Hakeem J. Shakir; Adnan H. Siddiqui; Elad I. Levy; Leonardo Renieri; Christophe Cognard; Ajith J. Thomas; Thomas R. Marotta
BACKGROUND Flow diversion for basilar apex aneurysms has rarely been reported. OBJECTIVE To assess flow diversion for basilar apex aneurysms in a multicenter cohort. METHODS Retrospective review of prospectively maintained databases at 8 academic institutions was performed from 2009 to 2016 to identify patients with basilar apex aneurysms treated with flow diversion. Clinical and radiographic data were analyzed. RESULTS Sixteen consecutive patients (median age 54.5 yr) underwent 18 procedures to treat 16 basilar apex aneurysms with either the Pipeline Embolization Device (Medtronic Inc, Dublin, Ireland) or Flow Redirection Endoluminal Device (Microvention, Tustin, California). Five aneurysms (31.3%) were treated in the setting of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Seven aneurysms (43.8%) were treated with flow diversion alone, while 9 (56.2%) underwent flow diversion and adjunctive coiling. At a median follow-up of 6 mo, complete (100%) and near-complete (90%-99%) occlusion was noted in 11 (68.8%) aneurysms. Incomplete occlusion occurred more commonly in patients treated with flow diversion alone compared to those with adjunctive coiling. Patients with partial occlusion were significantly younger. Retreatment with an additional flow diverter and adjunctive coiling occurred in 2 aneurysms with wide necks. There was 1 mortality in a patient (6.3%) who experienced posterior cerebral artery and cerebellar strokes as well as subarachnoid hemorrhage after the placement of a flow diverter. Minor complications occurred in 2 patients (12.5%). CONCLUSION Flow diversion for the treatment of basilar apex aneurysms results in acceptable occlusion rates in highly selected cases. Both primary flow diversion and rescue after failed clipping or coiling resulted in a modified Rankin Scale score that was either equal or better than at presentation and the technology represents a viable alternative or adjunctive option.