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Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Variations in the origins and courses of the vertebral arteries are relatively rare but may be clinically meaningful. We hypothesize a relationship between variant origins of the vertebral arteries and their levels of entry to the foramina transversaria.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this retrospective study of CT angiograms, we document the frequency and types of vertebral artery variants, correlating origins with levels of entry to the foramina transversaria.
RESULTS: Vertebral artery variants were observed in 18.7% of a sample of 460 CT angiograms of the neck. Right-sided variants were less common than left (44.2% versus 68.6%, with 12.8% bilateral) and more common than previously thought. The most common variant on both sides was a variant origin proximal to the normal vertebral artery origin and entry at C5. Most right vertebral arteries originating within 2 cm of the origin of the right subclavian artery and left vertebral arteries originating between the left common carotid and subclavian arteries were “high-entry” variants. Most “low-entry” variants, entering at C7, took origin from the arch just distal to the left subclavian artery or at a common origin with the costocervical trunk. Multiple origins or accessory vertebral arteries were also described, and each moiety followed the same rules described for single origins. A map of vertebral artery origins mirrored the map of aortic arch embryology.
CONCLUSIONS: Vertebral artery variants follow certain well-defined patterns that correlate with the embryology of the aortic arch and great vessels.
ABBREVIATIONS:
- CCT
- costocervical trunk
- FT
- foramen transversarium
- ISA
- intersegmental artery
- LCCA
- left common carotid artery
- LSCA
- left subclavian artery
- LVA
- left vertebral artery
- RSCA
- right subclavian artery
- RVA
- right vertebral artery
- SCA
- subclavian artery
- VA
- vertebral artery
- © 2023 by American Journal of Neuroradiology