Fetal PCA: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "thumb * Fetal PCA origin: common variant, seen in ~20-30% of pts * Posterior Communicating Artery (PCom) size > P1 seg of PCA, provides most of blood supply → known as “fetal PCom” * P1 seg can be hypoplastic or absent → influences stroke pattern, as PCA functions as part of anterior circulation * PCom, larger than P1, allows for collateral circulation * Fetal PCA positioning: superior or superolateral to oculomotor nerve; non-fetal PCA: PC...")
 
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[[File:Fetal PCA.png|thumb]]
[[File:Fetal PCA.png|thumb]]
* Fetal PCA origin: common variant, seen in ~20-30% of pts
* Fetal PCA origin: common variant, seen in ~20-30% of pts
* [[Posterior Communicating Artery]] (PCom) size > P1 seg of PCA, provides most of blood supply → known as “fetal PCom”
* [[Posterior Communicating Artery]] (PCom) size > P1 seg of [[PCA]], provides most of blood supply → known as “fetal PCom”
* P1 seg can be hypoplastic or absent → influences stroke pattern, as PCA functions as part of anterior circulation
* P1 seg can be hypoplastic or absent → influences stroke pattern, as PCA functions as part of anterior circulation
* PCom, larger than P1, allows for collateral circulation
* PCom, larger than P1, allows for collateral circulation
* Fetal PCA positioning: superior or superolateral to [[Oculomotor Nerve|oculomotor nerve]]; non-fetal PCA: PCom superomedial to oculomotor nerve
* Fetal PCA positioning: superior or superolateral to [[Oculomotor Nerve|oculomotor nerve]]; non-fetal PCA: PCom superomedial to [[Oculomotor Nerve|oculomotor nerve]]


== Potential complications ==
== Potential complications ==

Latest revision as of 05:28, 3 August 2024

  • Fetal PCA origin: common variant, seen in ~20-30% of pts
  • Posterior Communicating Artery (PCom) size > P1 seg of PCA, provides most of blood supply → known as “fetal PCom”
  • P1 seg can be hypoplastic or absent → influences stroke pattern, as PCA functions as part of anterior circulation
  • PCom, larger than P1, allows for collateral circulation
  • Fetal PCA positioning: superior or superolateral to oculomotor nerve; non-fetal PCA: PCom superomedial to oculomotor nerve

Potential complications

  • Occlusion of fetal PCom can → occipital lobe infarction
  • Large aneurysm alone not necessarily problematic for PCom occlusion, but parent arteries preservation preferred
  • Multiple aneurysms: not independently assoc. w/ PCom dominance
  • Vertebral artery hypoplasia: can be assoc. w/ fetal circulation, especially if bilateral, but not necessarily
  • Persistent trigeminal artery: congenital anastomosis b/w internal carotid artery & basilar artery proximal to PCA

If bilateral:

  • Basilar artery significantly smaller than normal.