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Giacomo Bertolini 1 Article
Neurosurgery
A point-of-care evaluation after visual loss following paraclinoid aneurysm repair: the role of sonographic and pupillometer assessment
Giacomo Bertolini, Ernesto Migliorino, Diego Mazzatenta, Carlo Bortolotti, Raffaele Aspide
Acute Crit Care. 2025;40(1):144-149.   Published online July 5, 2022
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4266/acc.2022.00045
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Visual complications represent common deficits following surgical or endovascular repair of paraclinoid aneurysms. Different etiologies should be investigated to prevent devastating consequences. Herein we present a point-of-care evaluation to investigate sudden visual loss after coiling of paraclinoid aneurysms. A 20-year-old male was admitted for a sudden headache. Head computed tomography showed a subarachnoid hemorrhage and subsequent angiography revealed a 9-mm left supraclinoid aneurysm of the internal carotid artery treated with endovascular coil embolization. Thirty minutes after intensive care unit admission, the patient reported a left amaurosis. To exclude secondary etiologies, an immediate evaluation with point-of-care devices (color-doppler and B-mode ultrasound and automated pupillometry) was performed. Sonographic evaluations were negative for ischemic/thrombotic events and neurologic pupil index within physiological ranges provide evidence of third cranial nerve responsiveness. The symptomatology resolved progressively over 120 minutes with low-dose steroid therapy, 30° head-of-bed elevation, and blood pressure management. Visual deficits can occur after endovascular procedure and should be investigated. Suspected visual loss is a neurological emergency that deserves a prompt evaluation. Ultrasound and automated pupillometry have proved to be an effective, rapid, reliable, and non-invasive combination for a clinical decision-making strategy in the management of post-procedural acute visual deficits.

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