Acta neurochirurgica
-
Acta neurochirurgica · Sep 2014
Case Reports Randomized Controlled TrialFlow-related intracranial aneurysms associated with unfused arterial twigs relevant to different vascular anomalies: embryologic and hemodynamic considerations.
Cerebrovascular anomalies resulting from the persistence of unfused embryonic twig-like vessels are associated with intracranial aneurysms. All records of patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms who were treated at our institution were retrospectively reviewed for the presence of aneurysm-associated, unfused, twig-like vessels in the middle cerebral artery (MCA). Such vessels were recorded as twig-like MCA (T-MCA) or twig-like networks of an anomalous collateral artery (T-NACA). Additionally, we sought to characterize vulnerable intracranial aneurysms associated with those vascular anomalies. ⋯ These unique vascular anomalies, T-MCA and T-NACA, which are caused by heterogeneous maldevelopment of the primitive cerebral vessels, are not benign because of their frequent association with flow-related aneurysms, which are vulnerable to rupture. Microsurgical or endovascular treatments for this type of flow-related aneurysm associated with twigs are mandatory to prevent fatal rebleeding, and more attention has to be given when physicians encounter steno-occlusive MCA lesions in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage to detect any vulnerable aneurysms associated with twig-like vessels.