Cargando…

Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery

(1) Background: The anterior cerebral artery (ACA) has a precommunicating A1 segment, followed by a postcommunicating A2 segment. Anatomically, after it sends off from the callosomarginal artery (CMA), it continues as the pericallosal artery (PCalA). A detailed pattern of the anatomical variations o...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mincă, Dragoş Ionuţ, Rusu, Mugurel Constantin, Rădoi, Petrinel Mugurel, Hostiuc, Sorin, Toader, Corneliu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9608487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36295526
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina58101365
_version_ 1784818782177329152
author Mincă, Dragoş Ionuţ
Rusu, Mugurel Constantin
Rădoi, Petrinel Mugurel
Hostiuc, Sorin
Toader, Corneliu
author_facet Mincă, Dragoş Ionuţ
Rusu, Mugurel Constantin
Rădoi, Petrinel Mugurel
Hostiuc, Sorin
Toader, Corneliu
author_sort Mincă, Dragoş Ionuţ
collection PubMed
description (1) Background: The anterior cerebral artery (ACA) has a precommunicating A1 segment, followed by a postcommunicating A2 segment. Anatomically, after it sends off from the callosomarginal artery (CMA), it continues as the pericallosal artery (PCalA). A detailed pattern of the anatomical variations of the PCalA are needed for practical reasons. (2) Methods: There were 45 retrospectively documented Computed Tomography Angiograms of 32 males and 13 females. (3) Results: In 90 sides, eleven different types of PCalA were documented: type 1: normal origin, above the genu of the corpus callosum (CC) (51.11%); type 2: low origin, below the rostrum of the CC (8.88%); type 3: late origin, above the body of the CC (3.33%); type 4, initial transcallosal course (3.33%); type 5, duplicated PCalA (1.11%); type 6, azygos PCalA (2.22%); type 7, absent PCalA (CMA type of ACA) (7.78%); type 8: CMA continued as PCalA (5.56%); type 9: PCalA continued as the cingular branch (1.11%); type 10: PCalA type of ACA, absent CMA (14.44%); type 11: triple PCalA, with an added median artery of the CC (1.11%). Different types of CMA were also documented: type 0, absent CMA (17.78%); type 1, CMA with frontoparietal distribution (45.56%); type 2, CMA with parietal distribution (22.22%); type 3, low origin of CMA, either from A1, or from A2 (8.88%); type 4, CMA continued as PCalA (5.56%). Ipsilateral combinations of PCalA and CMA types were classified as types A-P. In 33/45 cases (73.3%), the bilateral asymmetry of the combined anatomical patterns of PCalA and CMA was documented. Additional rare variations were found: (a) huge fenestration of A2; (b) bihemispheric ACAs (6/45 cases); (c) twisted arteries within the interhemispheric fissure. (4) Conclusions: The PCalA and CMA are anatomically diverse and unpredictable. Therefore, they should be documented on a case-by-case basis before surgical or endovascular approaches.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9608487
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-96084872022-10-28 Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery Mincă, Dragoş Ionuţ Rusu, Mugurel Constantin Rădoi, Petrinel Mugurel Hostiuc, Sorin Toader, Corneliu Medicina (Kaunas) Article (1) Background: The anterior cerebral artery (ACA) has a precommunicating A1 segment, followed by a postcommunicating A2 segment. Anatomically, after it sends off from the callosomarginal artery (CMA), it continues as the pericallosal artery (PCalA). A detailed pattern of the anatomical variations of the PCalA are needed for practical reasons. (2) Methods: There were 45 retrospectively documented Computed Tomography Angiograms of 32 males and 13 females. (3) Results: In 90 sides, eleven different types of PCalA were documented: type 1: normal origin, above the genu of the corpus callosum (CC) (51.11%); type 2: low origin, below the rostrum of the CC (8.88%); type 3: late origin, above the body of the CC (3.33%); type 4, initial transcallosal course (3.33%); type 5, duplicated PCalA (1.11%); type 6, azygos PCalA (2.22%); type 7, absent PCalA (CMA type of ACA) (7.78%); type 8: CMA continued as PCalA (5.56%); type 9: PCalA continued as the cingular branch (1.11%); type 10: PCalA type of ACA, absent CMA (14.44%); type 11: triple PCalA, with an added median artery of the CC (1.11%). Different types of CMA were also documented: type 0, absent CMA (17.78%); type 1, CMA with frontoparietal distribution (45.56%); type 2, CMA with parietal distribution (22.22%); type 3, low origin of CMA, either from A1, or from A2 (8.88%); type 4, CMA continued as PCalA (5.56%). Ipsilateral combinations of PCalA and CMA types were classified as types A-P. In 33/45 cases (73.3%), the bilateral asymmetry of the combined anatomical patterns of PCalA and CMA was documented. Additional rare variations were found: (a) huge fenestration of A2; (b) bihemispheric ACAs (6/45 cases); (c) twisted arteries within the interhemispheric fissure. (4) Conclusions: The PCalA and CMA are anatomically diverse and unpredictable. Therefore, they should be documented on a case-by-case basis before surgical or endovascular approaches. MDPI 2022-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9608487/ /pubmed/36295526 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina58101365 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mincă, Dragoş Ionuţ
Rusu, Mugurel Constantin
Rădoi, Petrinel Mugurel
Hostiuc, Sorin
Toader, Corneliu
Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery
title Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery
title_full Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery
title_fullStr Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery
title_full_unstemmed Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery
title_short Transcallosal and Pericallosal Courses of the Anterior Cerebral Artery
title_sort transcallosal and pericallosal courses of the anterior cerebral artery
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9608487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36295526
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina58101365
work_keys_str_mv AT mincadragosionut transcallosalandpericallosalcoursesoftheanteriorcerebralartery
AT rusumugurelconstantin transcallosalandpericallosalcoursesoftheanteriorcerebralartery
AT radoipetrinelmugurel transcallosalandpericallosalcoursesoftheanteriorcerebralartery
AT hostiucsorin transcallosalandpericallosalcoursesoftheanteriorcerebralartery
AT toadercorneliu transcallosalandpericallosalcoursesoftheanteriorcerebralartery