4.4 Article

Clinical, morphological, and hemodynamic independent characteristic factors for rupture of posterior communicating artery aneurysms

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROINTERVENTIONAL SURGERY
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages 808-812

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2015-011865

Keywords

Aneurysm; Blood Flow; Hemorrhage; Stroke; Angiography

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81301003, 81371315, 81171079, 81220108007]
  2. Special Research Project for Capital Health Development [2014-1-1071]
  3. Beijing Neurosurgical Institute [2014-001]

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Objective To identify clinical, morphological, and hemodynamic independent characteristic factors that discriminate posterior communicating artery (PCoA) aneurysm rupture status. Methods 173 patients with single PCoA aneurysms (108 ruptured, 65 unruptured) between January 2012 and June 2014 were retrospectively collected. Patient-specific models based on their three-dimensional digital subtraction angiography images were constructed and analyzed by a computational fluid dynamic method. All variables were analyzed by univariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression analysis. Results Two clinical factors (younger age and atherosclerosis), three morphological factors (higher aspect ratio, bifurcation type, and irregular shape), and six hemodynamic factors (lower mean and minimum wall shear stress, higher oscillatory shear index, a greater portion of area under low wall shear stress, unstable and complex flow pattern) were significantly associated with PCoA aneurysm rupture. Independent factors characterizing the rupture status were identified as age (OR 0.956, p=0.015), irregular shape (OR 6.709, p<0.001), and minimum wall shear stress (OR 0.001, p=0.038). Conclusions We combined clinical, morphological, and hemodynamic characteristics analysis and found the three strongest independent factors for PCoA aneurysm rupture were younger age, irregular shape, and low minimum wall shear stress. This may be useful for guiding risk assessments and subsequent treatment decisions for PCoA aneurysms.

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