Moyamoya disease

Synonyms:

Moyamoya disease a.k.a. idiopathic progressive arteriopathy of childhood a.k.a. spontaneous occlusion of circle of Willis:

Diagnosis:

Moyamoya syndrome is an angipathic pattern, not a specific disease. It has primary & secondary causes
Moyamoya disease referes to the idiopathic condition that represents primary moyamoya syndrome
 

Clinical features:

  • Bimodal age of onset: children ~5 years old & adults ~40 years old.
  • TIA, Ischemic stroke, intraparenchymal hemorrhage (basal ganglia), Subarachnoid hemorrhage, seizures, migraine-like headaches.
  • Ophthalmoscopy: “morning glory disk,” an enlargement of the optic disk with concomitant retinovascular anomalies

 

Findings on Investigations:

CT:

  • With contrast shows punctate dots in the basal ganglia & net like vessels in cisterns
  • Intraventricular hemorrhage may occur
  • Atrophy anterior> posterior in children
  • Features of Complications (stroke, intraparenchymal hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage)

MRI:

  • T1: Basal ganglia flow voids
  • T2: white matter disease
  • Reduced flow voids in the internal, middle, and anterior cerebral arteries
  • Prominent flow voids through the basal ganglia and thalamus (from collateral vessels)
  • FLAIR: Cortical flow= high signal in sulci = “ivy sign”
  • T2 Gradient echo: prior hemorrhage
  • DWI: acute stroke if acute on chronic disease
  • T1+C: shows punctate dots in the basal ganglia & net like vessels in cisterns. Enhanced “Ivy sign”

CTA:

  • Narrowed intracranial internal carotid arties & proximal ACA & MCA.
  • Collaterals from internal carotid artery (basal ganglia) and external carotid artery.
  • Aneurysms (circle of Willis, basal ganglia, collateral vessels)

Catheter Angiography:

  • Gold standard test
  • Stenosis of distal ICA bilaterally or proximal circle of Willis arteries
  • Enlargement of lenticulostriate/thalamostriate arteries “puff of smoke” appearance.
  • Dilated anterior choroidal artery
  • Transdural & transosseous ICA ECA collaterals
  • See Suzuki grade. Also do ECA angiograms to evaluate collaterals.
  • Aneurysms may occur (circle of Willis, basal ganglia, collateral vessels).

EEG, in children:

  • Posterior or centrotemporal slowing
  • Hyperventilation: build up (monophasic slow waves during hyperventilation), re-build up (monophosic slow waves after hyperventilation) indicates diminished cerebral reserve.

 

Pathology:

  • It affects Large vessels: Narrowed vessels
  • Hyperplasia of smooth-muscle cells and luminal thrombosis
  • Tunica Media: attenuated, with irregular elastic lamina
  • Collaterals: fragmented elastic lamina, thinned tunica media, microaneurysms
Suzuki Grade:
  • I: Narrowing of ICA apex
  • II: Initiation of “puff of smoke” moyamoya collaterals
  • III: Narrowing of internal carotids with prominent moyamoya collaterals (puff of smoke). Diminished cortical perfusion.
  • IV: Development of ECA collaterals
  • V: prominent ECA collaterals & reduction of moyamoya collaterals
  • VI: Occlusion of ICAs & disappearance of internal carotid artery collaterals (persistence of ECA collaterals)

 

Treatment:

Atherosclerotic moyamoya syndrome should be treated like high grade intracranial atherosclerotic disease ICAD. The rest of the discussion refers to non-atherosclerotic moyamoya syndrome:

  • Aspirin in adults presenting with ischemic stroke unless intraparenchymal hemorrhage is present
  • Revascularisation in non-atherosclerotic moyamoya syndrome
  • Indirect methods ECA branch to brain:
    • ECA (dura, temporalis muscle, or superficial temporal artery)
    • Examples:
      • Encephalo-dural-arterio-synangiosis EDAS
      • Encephalomyoarteriosynangiosis
      • Pial synangiosis
  • Direct methods ECA branch to ICA branch:
    • Superficial temporal artery- Middle cerebral artery anastomosis, STA-MCA anastomosis

References:

  1. Kawaguchi, S., et al., Characteristics of intracranial aneurysms associated with moyamoya disease. A review of 111 cases. Acta Neurochir (Wien), 1996. 138(11): p. 1287-94.
  2. Fung, L.W., D. Thompson, and V. Ganesan, Revascularisation surgery for Pediatric moyamoya: a review of the literature. Childs Nerv Syst, 2005. 21(5): p. 358-64.