The prevalence, clinical characteristics, and brain MRI changes in intracranial artery hypoplasia: a retrospective single-center cross-sectional study

Authors

  • Fritz S. Usman Department of Neurovascular Intervention, Pelni Hospital, West Jakarta, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Ganda Pariama Department of Neurovascular Intervention, Pelni Hospital, West Jakarta, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Novia Aiko Department of Neurovascular Intervention, Pelni Hospital, West Jakarta, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Leny Kurnia Department of Neurovascular Intervention, Pelni Hospital, West Jakarta, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Harris Murdianto Department of Neurovascular Intervention, Pelni Hospital, West Jakarta, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Merlin P. Kastilong Department of Neurovascular Intervention, Pelni Hospital, West Jakarta, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20232407

Keywords:

Anterior cerebral artery hypoplasia, Cerebral artery hypoplasia, Posterior cerebral artery hypoplasia, Stroke, Vertebral artery hypoplasia

Abstract

reduced cerebral blood flow, increased atherosclerosis, and aneurysm formation. This study aimed to describe the profile of vertebral artery hypoplasia (VAH), anterior CAH (ACAH), and posterior CAH (PCAH) in symptomatic subjects.

Methods: This was a retrospective cross-sectional study using medical record in a secondary private hospital in Jakarta, Indonesia, in January-December 2022. The inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years with neurological symptoms, underwent brain MRI, and being diagnosed with CAH using DSA. The exclusion criteria were findings of other vascular pathologies including dissection and >50% intracranial vessel stenosis. Demographics of age, sex, body mass index (BMI), hypertension, diabetes, cardiac disorder, and previous stroke were analyzed among VAH, PCAH, and ACAH groups.

Results: Of 769 subjects with clinical symptoms undergoing DSA, there were 66 (8.6%) cases of intracranial artery hypoplasia, including VAH (4.6%), PCAH (1.2%), and ACAH (2.9%). Subjects were predominantly old (53.2±10.1 years), male (53.0%), with BMI of 24.9±3.9 kg/m2 and hypertension (69.7%). Previous stroke (69.7%) was more prevalent than in previous study (28.1%). Stroke and brain ischemic lesion were detected in 89.4% and 84.8% cases. No differences were found in all parameters among all groups, but posterior circulation symptoms tended to be found in VAH (28.1%) than general stroke (20.3%).

Conclusions: The high percentage of recurrent stroke and corresponding clinical symptoms associated with CAH supported that CAH may be a risk factor for clinical symptoms, including stroke, regardless of the involved artery.

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Published

2023-07-29

How to Cite

Usman, F. S., Pariama, G., Aiko, N., Kurnia, L., Murdianto, H., & Kastilong, M. P. (2023). The prevalence, clinical characteristics, and brain MRI changes in intracranial artery hypoplasia: a retrospective single-center cross-sectional study. International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences, 11(8), 2804–2809. https://doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20232407

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Original Research Articles