Thursday, December 14, 2006

Right ICA aneurysm with oculomotor impingement






Findings

CT shows a clinically insignificant mild frontal scalp hematoma. Also, and more importantly, a prominent right suprasellar internal carotid artery in the region of the Circle of Willis. MRI shows a large saccular aneurysm of the distal right supraclinoid ICA with probable posterior impingement of the right CN III.


Diagnosis: Right ICA aneurysm with oculomotor impingement


Key points

An aneurysm is a focal dilatation of an artery that involves the intima and adventia of the wall. Most aneurysms are saccular (round or lobulated) and occur at arterial bifurcations, postulated to be the result of congenital defects or degenerative changes the vessel wall. More than 90% of saccular aneurysms occur in the anterior circulation, with 30-35% occurring at the anterior communicating artery, 30-35% occurring at the posterior communicating artery, and 20% occurring at the middle cerebral artery. Approximately 10% of saccular aneurysms occur at the posterior or vertebrobasilar artery locations.

Giant aneurysms are defined as those greater than 2.5 cm. in diameter. They account for 5-13% of all intracranial aneurysms, most commonly seen in women by a ratio of 3:1. They are usually multilayered with thrombus of varying age. They usually have a residual patent lumen.

Intracranial aneurysms most commonly present with subarachnoid hemorrhage. Only approximately 1% are discovered incidentally. Prognosis after SAH is widely variable and usually correlates with the Hunt-Hess scale:
- Asymptomatic or mild headache
- Moderate or severe headache, nuchal rigidity, can have oculomotor palsy
- Confused, drowsiness, or mild focal signs
- Stupor or hemiparesis
- Coma, moribund, and/or extensor posturing

In general, the larger the aneurysm and the older the patient, the more likely to rupture with a cumulative risk of 1% per year. Mortality is approximately 50%. If untreated, 50% re-bleed within 6 months.


Radiology

Angiography remains the "gold standard.", however MR angiography is playing an increasingly important role. The entire intracranial circulation must be studied because of the 15-20% incidence of multiple aneurysms.
2-5 % of patients with SAH will have a normal initial angiogram. Of these, 10-20% will demonstrate an aneurysm on a second angiogram.
CT can detect aneurysms as small as 3-5 mm. as an intensely enhancing residual lumen often with a peripheral rim of calcification.
MRI and MRA is being used increasingly and can detect aneurysms as small as 3-4mm. The most sensitive MR sequence for detection of SAH is FLAIR.

The appearance of giant aneurysms on MR results from their multi-layered structure. On spin echo images, the residual lumen creates a flow void. Slowly flowing blood may demonstrate a high signal. The thrombosed portion resembles multilayered intracranial hematomas with layers of varying signal intensity depending on the state of hemoglobin. However, the high signal ring tends to be central rather than peripheral because methemoglobin formation is optimal adjacent to the flowing oxygenated blood.

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