We read with interest the article by Cantón et al1 in the April 2005 issue of the AJNR reporting on intra-aneurysmal pressure changes during HydroCoil embolization.
The authors studied the intra-aneurysmal pressure after using hydrogel-coated coils. The intra-aneurysmal pressure was measured by using a standard pressure microprobe placed in a silicone model of a basilar tip aneurysm subjected to pulsatile flow.
Once hydrogel-coated coils are placed within a liquid substance, they tend to swell, similar to the behavior of polymers in a diaper material. Thus, hydrogel-coils depending on the number of cross-links within the polymer and the amount of coils used will incorporate or replace most of the blood within the aneurysm sac.
In trying to address some important biomechanical aspects with the use of HydroCoils, the authors were interested to study fluid pressure changes related to coiling. Of greater interest is to understand the risk of rupture associated with coiling aneurysms. This would include rather a measurement of the wall stress. The authors briefly address this shortcoming of their study.
The degree of stress to which an aneurysm wall is subjected is related to the aneurysm volume. For elastic material Laplace’s law defines the relationship between wall tension (eg, in a balloon), internal fluid pressure, and radius or volume. That is, without fluid pressure changes there will be no changes in wall tension. In an aneurysm an acute volume increase and stretching of the aneurysm wall can of course occur as a result of overpacking an aneurysm with solid material, or as in this study with the use of HydroCoils. In addition local deflection of the wall, resulting in increased wall stress, can also result directly from using a stiffer material such as a coil. Wall stress in an aneurysm can be measured, but is much more complicated than measuring the intra-aneurysmal fluid pressure. To measure the stress at the aneurysm wall, smaller probes (spring elements) have in the past been placed over the aneurysm surface. The applied force during coiling and its distribution can be monitored and plotted over the entire surface.
The authors’ main goal was to study the intra-aneurysmal total fluid pressure changes during placement of HydroCoils. The total intra-aneurysmal fluid pressure (or any pressure within the vascular tree) is the sum of static pressure and dynamic pressure as described by the Bernoulli equation. Dynamic pressure at any point in an artery is the amount of pressure required to arrest flow, and in the larger arteries is a very small fraction (single percents) of the total pressure. The major component of the total pressure is the static pressure that is the difference between the total and the dynamic pressure. In an aneurysm, however, flow is generally slower than in the parent vessel and the static pressure is nearly equivalent to the total pressure and thus, a measurable pressure rise in an aneurysm should not be expected. An intra-aneurysmal pressure increase can be expected only if the aneurysm would be isolated completely from the parent vessel during coiling.
Flow into side branches or within an artery is maintained by an arterial-to-venous pressure gradient, otherwise known as pressure-driven flow. The driving force for blood to enter an aneurysm is sustained by parent vessel flow pulsatility and the exchange of momentum between the parent artery and aneurysm. Because an unruptured aneurysm does not have a low-pressure exit port, it cannot be considered as a pressure-driven flow. These are basic principles in fluid mechanics applied to parent artery/aneurysm complex. In fact, some recent work from Sorteberg et al2 confirm these well-known facts among mechanical engineers. Thus, placement of coils or a porous stent across the neck of an aneurysm will not change the intra-aneurysmal pressure; however, the flow field will change. The vortices within the aneurysm will decrease. In a non-Newtonian fluid such as blood, the apparent viscosity will increase as a result of decreased shear rate. A stent or coils may uncouple the momentum exchange by disrupting the flow at the interface (neck) between artery and the aneurysm without changing the pressure.
In summary, a change in intra-aneurysmal fluid pressure should not be expected after treating an aneurysm with coils or a porous stent material. The more interesting question may be whether certain coils, such as HydroCoils, may increase the wall stress of the aneurysm, which then potentially could lead to (re)rupture. The authors, however, need to address the question by using different methods, as reflected in the references detailed at the bottom of this letter.3–7
References
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