Abstract
PURPOSE To examine the flow dynamics in a fatal aneurysm of the basilar artery in humans.
METHODS We made transparent elastic replicas of the vertebrobasilar arteries of an elderly patient who died of a ruptured aneurysm in the basilar artery. Using non-Newtonian fluid, physiological pulsatile flow volumes and profiles, and isobaric dyes and particles, we observed and recorded the slipstreams as they entered the aneurysm while changing relative flow in the vertebral arteries. Finally, we placed clips on the aneurysm, leaving residuals (or dog-ears), and observed the slipstreams.
RESULTS The aneurysm originated laterally from the greater curvature of a tortuous basilar artery, measured 19 x 11 x 12 mm, and had a Murphy's teat at the apex, the rupture site. The neck measured 10 x 4 mm, about the diameter of the basilar artery. Slipstreams joined at the confluence of the vertebral arteries, formed helical flow patterns, and entered the aneurysm violently, striking the apex. They then passed proximally around the sac walls, then centrally, and finally reentered the basilar artery to pass distally. Altering the relative flows in the vertebral arteries could modify and prevent slipstream flow into the aneurysm. When a dog-ear was created by incorrect placement of an aneurysm clip, slipstreams entered only dog-ears that lay distal to the clip. Correctly placed clips excluded the aneurysm from the circulation, but did not return the flow dynamics to normal.
CONCLUSION High-velocity slipstreams strike aneurysms at their rupture site and have an impact on distal but not proximal dog-ears. Modifying relative flow may prevent aneurysmal filling. Further, a knowledge of flow dynamics may allow us to predict which aneurysms are at risk of enlarging and rupturing, and may help guide proper therapy.
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