A Novel Window Into Human Vascular Remodeling and Diagnosing Carotid Flow Impairment: The Petro-Occipital Venous Plexus

Wenjie Yang, Kevin Sam, Ye Qiao, Zhongqing Huang, David A. Steinman, Bruce A Wasserman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Adaptive arterial remodeling caused by flow reduction from downstream stenosis has been demonstrated in an-imal studies. The authors sought to determine whether inward remodeling from downstream stenosis also occurs in humans and is detectable by ex vacuo expansion of the Rektorzik venous plexus (RVP) surrounding the petrous internal carotid artery. METHODS AND RESULTS: The authors analyzed 214 intracranial magnetic resonance imaging examinations that included contrast-enhanced vessel wall imaging. RVP symmetry was qualitatively assessed on vessel wall imaging. RVP thickness (RVPT) was measured on the thicker side if asymmetric or randomly assigned side if symmetric. Maximum stenosis (M1 or intracranial internal carotid artery) was measured. Posterior communicating artery and A1 diameters (>1.0 mm and 1.5 mm, re-spectively) defined adequate collateral outflow when proximal to the stenosis. Seventy-two patients had stenosis downstream from RVPT measurements. For those without adequate outflow (38 of 72), 95.0% with RVPT ≥1.0 mm had ≥50% stenosis compared with only 5.6% with RVPT <1.0 mm. For these 72 patients, higher RVPT (RVPT ≥1.0 mm versus <1.0 mm) and absent adequate outflow were associated with greater downstream stenosis (P<0.001) using multivariate regression. For patients with downstream stenosis without adequate outflow, asymmetric RVP thickening was associated with greater ipsilateral stenosis (P<0.001, all had ≥46% stenosis) when stenosis was unilateral and greater differences in stenosis between sides (P=0.005) when stenosis was bilateral. CONCLUSIONS: Inward internal carotid artery remodeling measured by RVPT or RVP asymmetry occurs as downstream stenosis approaches 50%, unless flow is preserved through a sufficiently sized posterior communicating artery or A1, and may serve as a functional measure of substantial flow reduction from downstream stenosis.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere031832
JournalJournal of the American Heart Association
Volume12
Issue number20
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 17 2023

Keywords

  • black blood MRI
  • intracranial stenosis
  • Rektorzik venous plexus
  • vascular remodeling
  • vessel wall imaging

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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