Abstract

Anatomical variations of the cerebral vasculature are frequently encountered. The archived magnetic resonance angiogram of a 62-year-old male patient was studied anatomically on planar slices and 3-dimensional volume renderings. Numerous anatomical variants were found in that single case. In the vertebrobasilar system were found: the proximal basilar artery fenestration, with a unilateral origin from that fenestration of an anterior inferior cerebellar artery, and the unilateral origin of the superior cerebellar artery from the P1 segment of the main posterior cerebral artery (PCA). There were also unilateral variants of the right internal carotid artery (ICA): a subvariant of an accessory PCA leaving the ICA as a hyperplastic anterior choroidal artery and united to the main PCA by a short communicating branch, distinctive of the posterior communicating artery in that side (unilateral double PCA); a right bihemispheric anterior cerebral artery (ACA) but with complete agenesis of the contralateral A1 ACA segment; from the right ACA continued an anatomically normal ipsilateral A2 segment and a short transverse contralateral A2 that, in turn, sent off long pericallosal and callosomarginal arteries; and fenestrated origin of the left pericallosal artery. Therefore, an arterial variant in one of the main cerebral circulations could not exclude anatomical variants in the other cerebral circulatory beds.

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