| Literature DB >> 34877055 |
Megumi Matsuda1, Hideki Endo1, Kohei Ishikawa1, Ryota Nomura1, Tomoaki Ishizuka1,2, Koji Oka1, Hirohiko Nakamura2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An extremely tortuous superior cerebellar artery is a rare anomaly. We report a case of an extremely tortuous superior cerebellar artery mimicking an aneurysm. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 77-year-old woman was initially diagnosed with unruptured cerebral aneurysm at the right basilar artery-superior cerebellar artery junction by magnetic resonance angiography. Catheter angiogram revealed that there was no apparent aneurysm at the basilar artery-superior cerebellar artery junction and the lesion was actually an extremely tortuous superior cerebellar artery.Entities:
Keywords: Anatomical anomaly; Cerebral aneurysm; Segmental dysgenesis; Superior cerebellar artery; Vascular malformations
Year: 2021 PMID: 34877055 PMCID: PMC8645463 DOI: 10.25259/SNI_864_2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Neurol Int ISSN: 2152-7806
Figure 1:Magnetic resonance angiography showing a lesion with the appearance of a cerebral aneurysm at the right basilar artery-superior cerebellar artery junction (arrow).
Figure 2:Selective left vertebral angiogram (oblique view) showing that the lesion is not an aneurysm, but rather involves an extremely tortuous right superior cerebellar artery at the anterior pontine segment (arrow). (a) Two-dimensional view. (b) Three-dimensional view.