Health care providers evaluate your condition and determine the most appropriate treatment. Treatment doesn't cure moyamoya disease. But treatment can be effective in preventing strokes.
The goal of treatment is to reduce your symptoms and improve brain blood flow. Treatment also aims to lower your risk of complications. Complications include ischemic stroke caused by a lack of blood flow, bleeding in your brain and death.
The prognosis for moyamoya disease depends on several factors, including:
- How early the disease was diagnosed.
- How much damage has occurred when you seek treatment.
- Whether or not you undergo treatment.
- Age.
Your treatment may include:
Medication
Medicines may be prescribed to manage symptoms, to reduce the risk of a stroke or to aid in seizure control. They include:
- Blood thinners. Blood thinners are typically recommended if you've been diagnosed with moyamoya disease and you have mild or no symptoms. Your health care provider may recommend that you take aspirin or another blood thinner to prevent strokes.
- Calcium channel blockers. Also known as calcium antagonists, this type of medicine may help manage headaches. They also may help reduce symptoms related to transient ischemic attacks. These drugs can help manage blood pressure, which is essential in people with moyamoya disease to prevent blood vessel damage.
- Anti-seizure medicines. These medicines could be helpful for those who have had seizures.
Moyamoya surgery types
Early surgical treatment can help slow progression of moyamoya disease. Your neurologist may recommend revascularization surgery if you develop symptoms or strokes. Surgery also may be recommended if tests show evidence of low blood flow to your brain.
In revascularization surgery, surgeons bypass blocked arteries. They do this by connecting blood vessels on the outside and inside of the skull to help restore blood flow to your brain. This may include direct or indirect revascularization procedures. Or it may include a combination of both.
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Direct revascularization procedures. In direct revascularization surgery, surgeons stitch the scalp artery directly to a brain artery. This is also known as superficial temporal artery to middle cerebral artery bypass surgery. This procedure increases blood flow to your brain immediately.
Direct bypass surgery may be difficult to perform in children due to the size of the blood vessels to be attached. But it's the preferred option in adults. This intervention can be performed safely and effectively by an experienced surgical team that treat moyamoya patients on a daily basis.
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Indirect revascularization procedures. In indirect revascularization, the goal is to lay over the brain surface blood-rich tissues to increase blood flow to your brain gradually over time. In high-volume surgical centers, indirect revascularization is almost always combined with direct revascularization in adult patients.
Types of indirect revascularization procedures include encephaloduroarteriosynangiosis (EDAS) or encephalomyosynangiosis (EMS), or a combination of both.
In EDAS, a surgeon separates a scalp artery over several inches.
The surgeon makes a small temporary opening on the skin to expose the artery. Then the surgeon makes an opening in your skull directly beneath the artery. The surgeon lays the intact scalp artery to the surface of your brain, which allows blood vessels from the artery to grow into your brain over time. The surgeon then replaces the bone and closes the opening in your skull.
In EMS, your surgeon separates a muscle in the temple region of your forehead and places it onto the surface of your brain through an opening in your skull. This helps restore blood flow.
Your surgeon may perform EMS with EDAS. In this procedure, your surgeon separates a muscle in the temple region of your forehead. The surgeon places it onto the surface of your brain after attaching the scalp artery to the surface of your brain. The muscle helps to hold the artery in place as blood vessels grow into your brain over time.
Possible surgery risks of revascularization procedures for moyamoya disease include changes in pressure in the blood vessels in the brain. This can cause symptoms such as headaches, bleeding and seizures. However, the benefits of surgery largely outweigh the risks.
Some people with moyamoya disease develop a bulge or ballooning of a blood vessel in the brain known as a brain aneurysm. If this occurs, surgery may be necessary to prevent or treat a ruptured brain aneurysm.
Therapy
To address the physical and mental effects of a stroke on you or your child, your health care provider may recommend an evaluation by a psychiatrist or therapist. Without surgery, moyamoya disease can cause cognitive decline due to narrowing blood vessels. A psychiatrist may look for signs of problems with thinking and reasoning skills. The psychiatrist also may monitor you or your child for signs that those problems are worsening.
Cognitive behavioral therapy can help address emotional issues related to having moyamoya disease, such as how to cope with fears and uncertainties about future strokes.
Physical and occupational therapy can help regain any lost physical function caused by a stroke.