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Fetal posterior cerebral artery configurations in an ischemic stroke versus an unselected hospital population
Author(s) -
Frid Petrea,
Wasselius Johan,
Drake Mattias,
Wu Ona,
Petersson Jesper,
Rost Natalia S.,
Lindgren Arne
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
acta neurologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.967
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1600-0404
pISSN - 0001-6314
DOI - 10.1111/ane.13558
Subject(s) - medicine , posterior cerebral artery , stroke (engine) , population , infarction , laterality , cerebral infarction , ischemic stroke , cardiology , middle cerebral artery , ischemia , myocardial infarction , engineering , audiology , mechanical engineering , environmental health
Background Few MRA‐based studies have systematically evaluated the prevalence and laterality of a fetal configuration of the posterior cerebral artery (FTP) in ischemic stroke populations versus other populations. This common variant is important in the setting of acute stroke and secondary prevention decisions. Objective To determine the prevalence and laterality of FTP configurations in MRI‐DWI verified acute ischemic stroke patients investigated with MRA, and compare the findings with an unselected hospital population investigated with computed tomography angiography (CTA). We also evaluated the association of FTP with posterior cerebral artery (PCA) territory infarctions. Methods We reviewed the MRAs of 1407 ischemic stroke patients with acute lesions on MRI‐DWI sequences and 546 consecutive CTAs of patients investigated on any indication in a tertiary hospital. The MRA and CTA assessments were made by neuroradiologists blinded to original reports on stroke location and vessel anatomy. Results The prevalence of any FTP was similar in ischemic stroke patients (31%) and unselected patients (32%). Unilateral FTP was significantly more frequent on the right than on the left side in both groups (15% right vs. 8% left). The presence of FTP ipsilateral to stroke side was not associated with involvement of the PCA territory versus no FTP on the stroke side. Conclusions FTP is present in approximately 30% of ischemic stroke patients and unselected hospital populations and was detected significantly more frequently on the right versus left side in both groups. PCA territory infarction was not associated with the presence of ipsilateral FTP.