Abstract

Highlights. Small cerebral aneurysms (<3 mm), which make up the majority of aneurysms, rupture more frequently, although medium (>3 mm) and giant (>15 mm) aneurysms and have a higher risk of rupture. This article proves for the first time that the rupture risk criteria developed for giant cerebral aneurysms do not work for small aneurysms. The development of small aneurysms in patients was analyzed and measured morphological features of aneurysms were compared with their calculated hydrodynamic characteristics.Aim. To study the dynamics of development of small cerebral aneurysms, to assess the applicability of existing methods for calculating the risk of rupture, to formulate new clarifying hypotheses for calculating the risk of rupture of small cerebral aneurysms.Methods. Patient data were provided by the Federal Center for Neurosurgery, Novosibirsk. CT angiography was performed using a Philips Ingenuite CT scanner (Philips Medical Systems, USA, 128 slices). Aneurysm size dynamics was assessed by measuring three main sizes with an accuracy of 0.1 mm using the IntelliSpace Portal Philips software environment. Numerical calculations were carried out using ANSYS CFX 2020R2.Results. Hemodynamic characteristics change according to the changes of the aneurysm dome. In the case when morphological characteristics of the aneurysm have not changed, a change in the geometry of the patient's circle of Willis (coW) is observed: the curvature of the arteries, the angles of bifurcations (the structure of coW remained unchanged). The PHASES score (absolute risks of rupture for aneurysms) was found to be unusable for the considered aneurysms.Conclusion. This work formulates and morphologically and hydrodynamically confirms for the first time in the volunteers that the change in risk estimates for such aneurysms is fundamentally affected, even insignificantly, by the change in the circle of Willis: a change in the curvature of individual segments of the cerebral arteries, as well as the angles of their bifurcations. The results obtained are aimed at modifying the existing risk criteria for rupture of cerebral aneurysms.

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