| Literature DB >> 35140673 |
Heng Du1, Wenjie Yang2, Xiangyan Chen1.
Abstract
Intracranial artery calcification (IAC) was regarded as a proxy for intracranial atherosclerosis (ICAS). IAC could be easily detected on routine computer tomography (CT), which was neglected by clinicians in the previous years. The evolution of advanced imaging technologies, especially vessel wall scanning using high resolution-magnetic resonance imaging (HR-MRI), has aroused the interest of researchers to further explore the characteristics and clinical impacts of IAC. Recent histological evidence acquired from the human cerebral artery specimens demonstrated that IAC could mainly involve two layers: the intima and the media. Accumulating evidence from histological and clinical imaging studies verified that intimal calcification is more associated with ICAS, while medial calcification, especially the internal elastic lamina, contributes to arterial stiffness rather than ICAS. Considering the highly improved abilities of novel imaging technologies in differentiating intimal and medial calcification within the large intracranial arteries, this review aimed to describe the histological and imaging features of two types of IAC, as well as the risk factors, the hemodynamic influences, and other clinical impacts of IAC occurring in intimal or media layers.Entities:
Keywords: cerebrovascular disease; clinical relevance; histology; imaging; intracranial artery calcification
Year: 2022 PMID: 35140673 PMCID: PMC8818681 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.789035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Scoring system [by Kockelkoren et al. (18)] for distinguishing intimal calcification from medial calcification.
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| Circularity | Absent | 0 |
| Dot(s) | 1 | |
| <90 degrees | 2 | |
| 96–270 degrees | 3 | |
| 270–360 degrees | 4 | |
| Thickness | Absent | 0 |
| Thick ≥ 1.5 mm | 1 | |
| Thin <1.5 mm | 3 | |
| Morphology | Indistinguishable | 0 |
| Irregular/Patchy | 1 | |
| Continuous | 4 | |
< 7: Dominant intimal; ≥ 7: Dominant non-intimal.
Figure 1The formation and distribution of intracranial artery calcifications (intimal and medial). IAC mainly involves the intimal layer (A) and the medial layer (B) instead of the adventitial layer (C). During the initial process of atherosclerosis, inflammation (E) infiltrates constantly and intimal calcifications begin to emerge. Usually, calcifications appear as calcium granules (F) within or outside the injured smooth muscle cells (G) and scatter diffusely among extracellular materials. Some of the calcium deposits will be internalized by macrophage foam cells (H). After growing in size with continuous fusion (I) of adjacent granules, calcified deposits will turn into large structures (J). Eventually, with the intima (A) ulcerated by large calcifications, in situ thrombosis (O) will adhere to the bare surface of the lesion and release emboli (P) subsequently. In some cases, the shear stress upon the arterial wall will be concentrated (M) on the lesion where large intimal calcifications are present. The elevated shear stress will result in the deformation and rupture of neovessels inside the lesion, leading to intraplaque hemorrhage (N). At first, medial calcifications are irregular calcium deposits (K) distributed intra-cellularly in the vascular muscle cells (G) and extra-cellularly near damaged elastic fibers (D) in the medial layer (B). After confluent extending (L) up to incomplete circumference, medial calcification will distort the architecture of the medial layer and then involve the entire circumference of the vessel wall.
Comparison of risk factors between intimal and medial calcification (intracranial and periphery arteries).
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| Vos et al. ( | Intracranial ICAs of patients with acute ischemic stroke who received CT scans | 1,132 | Male, smoking, hypertension | Age, diabetes mellitus, previous vascular disease |
| Compagne et al. ( | Intracranial ICAs of patients who received CT scans and underwent thrombectomy | 344 | Male, smoking, pre-stroke with mRS ≤ 2 | Age, atrial fibrillation, diabetes mellitus, myocardial infarction, hypertension |
| Golüke et al. ( | Intracranial ICAs of patients with mixed dementia who received CT scans | 1,992 | Male, hypertension, smoking, myocardial infarction | Diabetes mellitus |
| Zwakenberg et al. ( | Femoral arteries of patients who received CT scans | 718 | Smoking, history of peripheral arterial disease, higher osteonectin level | Age, diabetes, HbA1c, higher ankle brachial index (ABI), higher dp-ucMGP level |
Figure 2The impact of intracranial artery calcifications (intimal and medial) on ischemic stroke. The presence of intimal calcification (A) may induce intraplaque hemorrhage (C). Intraplaque hemorrhage is one of the major causes for the rapid expanding of arterial plaque, which will then result in luminal stenosis (D). In some cases, the intima will be ulcerated by large calcification, leading to distal embolism (E). With an increase in the stenotic degree, the perfusion of the downward vascular territory will decrease (F), leading to brain ischemia (G) in the border zone of adjacent vascular branches. Unlike intimal calcifications, medial calcification (B) mainly causes arterial stiffness. The stiffened arterial wall will have limited compliance and vasodilation (H), which can be measured through carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, systolic flow velocity, and pulsatile index.
Summary of the difference between intimal calcification and medial calcification.
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| Intimal calcification | (1) Related to atherosclerosis, often in advanced stages; (2) Inflammation associated; (3) Granules initially, fuse into large lumps and plates of calcium (4) May ulcerate the intima | Thick / patchy clusters | Male gender; Smoking | (1) Elevated shear stress causing IPH; | With lower incidence of hemorrhage after intravenous-thrombolysis |
| Medial calcification | (1) Irrelevant to atherosclerosis; (2) Inflammation associated; (3) Four-stage formation: from deposits to confluent calcification involving the entire circumference | Thin, often in a circular pattern | Aging; Diabetes mellitus; Chronic kidney disease; | (1) Arterial stiffness; | With a trend toward worse outcome which may improve more after endovascular treatment |