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  • Title: Microsurgical anatomy of the perforating branches of the vertebral artery.
    Author: Marinković S, Milisavljević M, Gibo H, Maliković A, Djulejić V.
    Journal: Surg Neurol; 2004 Feb; 61(2):190-7; discussion 197. PubMed ID: 14751642.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: There is limited data in the literature related to the microanatomic features of the perforating branches of the vertebral artery. METHODS: The 44 vertebral arteries and their branches were injected with india ink or a radiopaque substance and examined under the stereoscopic microscope. RESULTS: The perforating arteries were noted to range in number from 1 to 11 (mean, 6.5) and in diameter between 100 microm and 520 microm (average, 243 microm). They arose from the vertebral artery (VA) (54.54%), 8 from the right, the left or both VAs. The anterior spinal artery (ASA), which was singular (81.82%), duplicated (13.64%), or plexiform (4.55%), always gave rise to the perforators. The vascular roots of the ASA were the source of the perforators in 95.45% of the brains. The latter vessels arose from the anterolateral arteries in 50% of the cases. The anastomoses involving the perforators, which were present in 40.91% of the brains, varied in diameter between 100 microm and 350 microm (mean, 169 microm). The perforating vessels gave rise to the side branches in 95.45% of the brains that varied in diameter from 100 microm to 300 microm (average, 161 microm). The perforators usually entered the foramen cecum and the anterior median sulcus, and then continued close and parallel to the raphe of the medulla. The perforators can be compressed by a VA aneurysm, which was found in one among the 71 examined patients with cerebral aneurysms. CONCLUSIONS: The obtained data give additional information about the vascular anatomy of the pontomedullary region.
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