4.4 Article

Morphometry of cerebral arterial bifurcations harbouring aneurysms: a case-control study

Journal

BMC NEUROLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12883-022-02559-8

Keywords

Intracranial aneurysm; Morphometry; Principle of minimum work; Aneurysm formation

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The study found that the dimensions of arteries forming the circle of Willis do not follow the principle of minimum work. Deviations from the energetically optimum geometry, such as larger parent artery radius and wider total bifurcation angle, may lead to the formation of intracranial aneurysms. Further investigation is needed to explore the significance of vessel dimensions and bifurcation angle on shear stress in arterial bifurcations.
Background Conclusions from studies evaluating vessel dimensions and their deviations from values resulting from the principle of minimum work (PMW) on the formation of intracranial aneurysms (IAs) are still inconclusive. Our study aimed to perform a morphometric analysis of cerebral arterial bifurcations harbouring aneurysms. Methods The study comprised 147 patients with basilar artery (BA) and middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysms and 106 patients constituting the control group. The following morphometric parameters were evaluated: the radii of vessels forming the bifurcation, the junction exponent, the values of the bifurcation angles (phi(1) and phi(2) angles between the parent vessel trunk axis and the larger or smaller branches, respectively; alpha angle, the total bifurcation angle) and the difference between the predicted optimal and observed branch angles. Results The analysed parameters for internal carotid artery (ICA) bifurcations were not significantly different among the groups. The MCA and BA bifurcation angles and the radii of the parent MCA and BA vessels with aneurysms were significantly higher than those of the control group. The differences between the predicted optimal and observed branch angles were significantly higher for BA and MCA bifurcations with aneurysms compared to the control group. The mean junction exponent for bifurcations in the circle of Willis (i.e., ICA and BA bifurcations, respectively) and MCA bifurcations with aneurysms was significantly lower than the theoretical optimum and did not significantly differ among the groups. In a multilevel multivariate logistic regression analysis, the branch angles and the radius from the parent vessel were significant independent predictors of the presence of an IA. The ROC analysis indicated that the alpha angle was the best performer in discriminating between aneurysmal and nonaneurysmal bifurcations. Conclusions The dimensions of the arteries forming the circle of Willis do not follow the PMW. Deviation from the energetically optimum geometry for bifurcations beyond the circle of Willis (particularly, a larger radius of the parent artery and a wider total bifurcation angle) may lead to the formation of IAs. Further studies are warranted to investigate the significance of vessel dimensions and the bifurcation angle on the magnitude of shear stress in the walls of arterial bifurcations.

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