https://www.selleckchem.com/products/polybrene-hexadimethrine-bromide-.html The sensitivity of D-dimer assay was 81.25% and specificity 62.5%. Cerebral venous thrombosis is a disease with equal predilection among both genders affecting mostly young individuals. Most of the patients present with headache. Puerperium still contributes to majority of the cases. Iron deficiency anaemia needs to be evaluated as an association for CVT. Positive D-dimer should strengthen the suspicion of CVT in patients with acute headache. The purpose of this study was to retrospectively analyse the clinical and angiographic outcomes of Willis covered stent placement for unruptured aneurysms in internal carotid artery. Forty-six consecutive patients with internal carotid artery aneurysms (49 cases) were included to evaluate clinical and angiographic outcomes. Covered stent placement was successful in 47 cases, whereas stent navigation failed in 2 cases. Of the 49 aneurysms (mean aneurysm size, 7.9 mm), 5, 6, and 38 were located in the petrous, cavernous, and ophthalmic segments, respectively. Immediate angiography revealed complete aneurysm exclusion in 36 (76.6%) cases, whereas minimal endoleak was observed in 11 cases. Four patients had procedure-related complications, including 1 patient with acute in-stent thrombosis, 2 with a post-operative subarachnoid haemorrhage, and 1 with artery rupture. Angiographic and clinical follow-up was available for 36 patients (38 aneurysms). Complete aneurysm occlusion was achieved in 34 (89.5%) cases, endoleak was present in 2 cases, and aneurysm recurrence occurred in 2 cases. Asymptomatic in-stent stenosis was observed in 3 patients. No hemorrhagic or ischemic events occurred during the follow-up period. At follow-up, the modified Rankin scores were 0-2 for 35 patients and >2 for 1 patient. Satisfactory angiographic outcomes were achieved in our study. However, the risks of stent navigation failure, endoleak after balloon re-inflation, procedure-rel