An MRI study of typical anatomical variants of the anterior communicating artery complex

Purpose This magnetic resonance imaging study examined the most frequent anatomical variants of the anterior communicating artery (ACoA) complex of the cerebral arterial circle, and aimed to determine whether they were associated with ACoA complex aneurysm. Methods The study enrolled 669 patients. U...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgical and radiologic anatomy (English ed.) 2021-12, Vol.43 (12), p.1983-1988
Hauptverfasser: Fredon, Fabien, Baudouin, Maxime, Hardy, Jeremy, Kouirira, Assia, Jamilloux, Léa, Taïbi, Abdelkader, Mabit, Christian, Valleix, Denis, Rouchaud, Aymeric, Durand-Fontanier, Sylvaine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose This magnetic resonance imaging study examined the most frequent anatomical variants of the anterior communicating artery (ACoA) complex of the cerebral arterial circle, and aimed to determine whether they were associated with ACoA complex aneurysm. Methods The study enrolled 669 patients. Using three-dimensional time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography, 617 patients were classified into the following groups based on the anatomical variation in the ACoA complex: no ACoA complex anomaly; ACoA complex aneurysm; and vascular anomaly distant from the cerebral arterial circle. Results Of the 617 classified subjects, the classical anatomical description applied to 48.73% in the no ACoA complex anomaly group and 37.5% in the ACoA complex aneurysm group. One variant (left anterior cerebral artery segment A1 hypoplasia) was significantly more frequent in the ACoA complex aneurysm group. There was no sex difference in the prevalence of any variant. Conclusions Anatomical variants of the ACoA complex of the cerebral arterial circle were found in almost half of the subjects. One variant seemed to be associated with a higher likelihood of an aneurysm, but causality could not be inferred.
ISSN:0930-1038
1279-8517
DOI:10.1007/s00276-021-02782-x