Carotid-vertebrobasilar anastomosis: magnetic resonance and computed tomographic angiographic demonstration.
Akira UchinoPublished in: Japanese journal of radiology (2019)
Carotid-vertebrobasilar (VB) anastomoses are rare and usually found incidentally, but they can have clinical significance. Their variance can represent aneurysm formation at the origin of the anomalous artery, cerebral ischemia due to unique blood flow, or other complications. Thus, recognition and correct diagnosis of these anomalous vessels are important when interpreting magnetic resonance (MR) and computed tomography (CT) angiography. This pictorial essay presents MR and CT angiographic images of several types of persistent fetal carotid-VB anastomoses, including those involving the proatlantal, hypoglossal, and trigeminal arteries as well as their variants. Images depict types 1 and 2 proatlantal arteries, persistent second cervical intersegmental artery, persistent hypoglossal artery (PHA), PHA of external carotid origin, two types of the PHA variant, posterior inferior cerebellar artery arising from the jugular branch of the ascending pharyngeal artery, lateral and medial types of persistent trigeminal arteries (PTAs), and four types of PTA variants.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance
- blood flow
- contrast enhanced
- computed tomography
- cerebral ischemia
- magnetic resonance imaging
- deep learning
- copy number
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- optical coherence tomography
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury
- convolutional neural network
- coronary artery
- gene expression
- image quality
- minimally invasive
- ultrasound guided