Abstract

BackgroundIntracranial internal carotid artery (iICA) calcification is associated with stroke and is often seen as a proxy of atherosclerosis of the intima. However, it was recently shown that these calcifications are predominantly located in the tunica media and internal elastic lamina (medial calcification). Intimal and medial calcifications are thought to have a different pathogenesis and clinical consequences and can only be distinguished through ex vivo histological analysis. Therefore, our aim was to develop CT scoring method to distinguish intimal and medial iICA calcification in vivo.MethodsFirst, in both iICAs of 16 cerebral autopsy patients the intimal and/or medial calcification area was histologically assessed (142 slides). Brain CT images of these patients were matched to the corresponding histological slides to develop a CT score that determines intimal or medial calcification dominance. Second, performance of the CT score was assessed in these 16 patients. Third, reproducibility was tested in a separate cohort.ResultsFirst, CT features of the score were circularity (absent, dot(s), <90°, 90–270° or 270–360°), thickness (absent, ≥1.5mm, or <1.5mm), and morphology (indistinguishable, irregular/patchy or continuous). A high sum of features represented medial and a lower sum intimal calcifications. Second, in the 16 patients the concordance between the CT score and the dominant calcification type was reasonable. Third, the score showed good reproducibility (kappa: 0.72 proportion of agreement: 0.82) between the categories intimal, medial or absent/indistinguishable.ConclusionsThe developed CT score shows good reproducibility and can differentiate reasonably well between intimal and medial calcification dominance in the iICA, allowing for further (epidemiological) studies on iICA calcification.

Highlights

  • Calcification of the intracranial internal carotid artery on Computed Tomography (CT) is an independent predictor of stroke in the general white population and was associated with 75% of all stroke in the Rotterdam study.[1]

  • Intracranial internal carotid artery calcification is associated with stroke and is often seen as a proxy of atherosclerosis of the intima

  • While calcifications in the intracranial internal carotid artery (iICA) are often seen as a proxy of atherosclerotic burden and thereby are thought to be situated in the arterial intimal layer, a recent histology study showed that these calcifications are predominantly non-atherosclerotic and are located in the tunica media and around the internal elastic lamina.[5]

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Summary

Introduction

Calcification of the intracranial internal carotid artery (iICA) on Computed Tomography (CT) is an independent predictor of stroke in the general white population and was associated with 75% of all stroke in the Rotterdam study.[1]. While calcifications in the iICA are often seen as a proxy of atherosclerotic burden and thereby are thought to be situated in the arterial intimal layer, a recent histology study showed that these calcifications are predominantly non-atherosclerotic and are located in the tunica media and around the internal elastic lamina.[5] Because calcifications of the medial layer of the vascular wall and calcifications around the internal elastic lamina are thought to be related and are from here on grouped as medial calcifications.[6]. Intimal and medial calcifications are thought to have a different pathogenesis and clinical consequences and can only be distinguished through ex vivo histological analysis. Our aim was to develop CT scoring method to distinguish intimal and medial iICA calcification in vivo.

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