Literature DB >> 31699885

Locations, associations and temporal evolution of intracranial arterial infundibular dilatations in children.

Adam A Dmytriw1, Daniel-Alexandre Bisson2, Kevin Phan2, Afsaneh Amirabadi2, Helen Branson2, Peter B Dirks3, Manohar Shroff2, Prakash Muthusami2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There are few data in the literature on the characteristics and natural history of intracranial arterial infundibular dilatations in children.
METHODS: An institutional review board-approved retrospective review was performed of infundibula reported on MR angiography in patients <18 years of age at our tertiary pediatric institute from 1998 to 2016. Clinical data (age, sex, diagnosis, other vascular variants/pathologies) were recorded and images assessed for vessel of origin, infundibulum size and exact location. Ratios of infundibulum:parent artery were assessed at diagnosis and last follow-up. Temporal evolution to aneurysm was evaluated.
RESULTS: We found 60 intracranial infundibula in 60 children (male:female=27:33; mean age 9.7±5.2 years, range 2-18 years,). Family history of aneurysms was present in 2/60 (3.3%). Syndromic association was found in 14/60 (23.3%), most frequently sickle cell disease (4/14=28.6%). Mean infundibulum size was 2.2±0.5 mm, with mean ratio to parent artery of 0.54±0.17. The most common location was on the P1-posterior cerebral artery (34/63=56.7%), whereas posterior communicating infundibula were seen in only 4/60 (6.7%) cases. Other cerebrovascular variants were seen in 12/60 (20%) patients. On follow-up imaging (in 32/60 patients over 86 patient-years, mean 32.3±35.7 months), no significant change in infundibulum:parent artery ratio was noted. None of the infundibular dilatations showed interval evolution to aneurysm.
CONCLUSION: We present the largest reported cohort of pediatric intracranial arterial infundibula, which we found to be distinct from their adult counterparts with regard to location, etiology and temporal evolution. Growth over time and/or aneurysmal formation are rare, not necessitating frequent short-term imaging surveillance during childhood. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aneurysm; magnetic resonance angiography; pediatrics; subarachnoid

Year:  2019        PMID: 31699885     DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2019-015433

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurointerv Surg        ISSN: 1759-8478            Impact factor:   5.836


  1 in total

1.  Balloon Assisted Coiling of a Ruptured Posterior Communicating Artery Infundibular Aneurysm: Case Report and Review of the Literature.

Authors:  Dimitri Laurent; Brandon Lucke-Wold; Yin Hu
Journal:  MedPress Surg       Date:  2021-06-09
  1 in total

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