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Vascular Anatomy

Anatomy
๐Ÿ“… Updated February 2026

Anterior Circulation โ€“ Internal Carotid & Branches

Internal Carotid Artery (ICA) โ€“ Segments & Key Branches โ–ผ

ICA Segments (high-yield)

Segment Location Key Points
Cervical Carotid bifurcation โ†’ skull base No major branches; common site for atherosclerosis
Petrous Carotid canal (temporal bone) Protected; small branches to petrous bone & middle ear
Cavernous Within cavernous sinus Close to CN III, IV, V1, V2, VI โ†’ cavernous sinus pathology
Supraclinoid (Terminal) After exiting cavernous sinus Gives off: Ophthalmic, PCom, Anterior Choroidal, ACA, MCA

ICA Stroke โ€“ Clinical Pattern

  • Often = MCA ยฑ ACA territory (if poor collateral flow via ACom/PCom)
  • Carotid T occlusion: Severe deficit โ€“ dense contralateral hemiplegia, hemisensory loss, gaze deviation, aphasia (dominant) or neglect (non-dominant), homonymous hemianopia
  • Retinal ischemia: Amaurosis fugax or monocular vision loss (ophthalmic artery)
  • Clue: Ipsilateral monocular blindness + contralateral hemiparesis โ†’ think ICA
๐Ÿ’Ž Board Pearl

“Carotid T” = terminal ICA occlusion at the carotid bifurcation into ACA & MCA โ†’ massive MCA ยฑ ACA syndrome + often poor collaterals.


Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA) & Divisions

MCA Anatomy & Territories โ–ผ

MCA Segments

  • M1: Horizontal/sphenoidal segment โ€“ from origin to bifurcation/trifurcation
  • M2: Insular segments (superior & inferior divisions)
  • M3/M4: Opercular & cortical branches over convexity

Key branches:

  • Lenticulostriate arteries (from M1): Supply basal ganglia & posterior limb of internal capsule (“arteries of stroke”)
  • Cortical branches: Lateral frontal, parietal, temporal lobes

Typical MCA Territory Deficit

  • Contralateral face & arm weakness > leg
  • Contralateral hemisensory loss (face/arm > leg)
  • Contralateral homonymous hemianopia (optic radiations)
  • Dominant hemisphere: Aphasia (Broca/Wernicke/global)
  • Non-dominant hemisphere: Hemispatial neglect, anosognosia, constructional apraxia
  • Eyes often deviate toward the lesion in acute phase

MCA Syndromes โ€“ M1 Proximal vs Distal vs Divisions

Pattern Clinical Features Key Clues / Localization
M1 Proximal
(before lenticulostriates)
โ€ข Dense contralateral hemiplegia (face, arm, leg)
โ€ข Contralateral hemisensory loss
โ€ข Gaze deviation toward lesion
โ€ข Aphasia (dominant) or neglect (non-dominant)
โ€ข Often early edema, mass effect
Cortical + deep signs.
Internal capsule + cortex involved.
Very severe deficit at onset (“devastating MCA stroke”).
M1 Distal
(after lenticulostriates)
โ€ข Cortical signs prominent (aphasia/neglect, field cut)
โ€ข Weakness typically less dense (internal capsule spared)
โ€ข May have mildโ€“moderate face/arm > leg weakness
Cortical signs without profound dense hemiplegia.
Think more distal M1 or large M2 branch occlusion.
Superior Division (M2) โ€ข Face & arm weakness prominent
โ€ข Little or no visual field deficit
โ€ข Dominant: Broca’s aphasia (nonfluent, good comprehension)
โ€ข Non-dominant: Mild neglect, motor apraxia
Motor + Broca’s = superior division (dominant).
Visual field often spared or mild.
Inferior Division (M2) โ€ข Prominent visual field deficit (HH or quadrantanopia)
โ€ข Little or no weakness
โ€ข Dominant: Wernicke’s aphasia (fluent, poor comprehension)
โ€ข Non-dominant: Severe neglect, anosognosia
Fluent aphasia + HH with minimal weakness = inferior division (dominant).
Non-dominant: “classic neglect” pattern.
๐Ÿ’Ž Board Pearl

Dense hemiplegia + aphasia/neglect โ†’ think proximal M1 (cortex + internal capsule).
Fluent aphasia + HH but NO weakness โ†’ inferior division MCA.


Anterior Cerebral, Anterior Choroidal & Ophthalmic Arteries

Anterior Cerebral Artery (ACA) โ–ผ

Course: From ICA โ†’ A1 segment โ†’ ACom โ†’ A2 pericallosal/callosomarginal branches.

Territory:

  • Medial frontal & parietal lobes
  • Leg area of motor & sensory cortex
  • Anterior corpus callosum & cingulate

ACA Stroke Syndrome:

  • Contralateral leg weakness > arm/face
  • Contralateral leg sensory loss
  • Urinary incontinence
  • Abulia, akinetic mutism (medial frontal/anterior cingulate)
  • Frontal release signs (grasp reflex)
  • Alien limb phenomena (medial frontal/callosal)
Anterior Choroidal Artery (AChA) โ–ผ

Origin: Supraclinoid ICA (classically) โ€“ small but high-yield vessel.

Structures supplied:

  • Posterior limb of internal capsule
  • Optic tract & lateral geniculate body
  • Medial temporal lobe (hippocampus)
  • Globus pallidus

Classic AChA Stroke Triad:

  • Contralateral hemiparesis (posterior limb IC)
  • Contralateral hemisensory loss
  • Contralateral homonymous hemianopia (optic tract/LGN)

Often incomplete in real-life, but exam loves the triad.

Ophthalmic Artery โ–ผ

Origin: First major branch of supraclinoid ICA; enters optic canal with optic nerve.

Supplies: Retina, optic nerve head, orbit.

Clinical:

  • Amaurosis fugax: Transient monocular vision loss (“curtain coming down”) from retinal ischemia due to carotid disease.
  • Retinal artery occlusion: Sudden painless monocular blindness; cherry red spot.

Circle of Willis โ€“ Anatomy & Variants

Circle of Willis โ€“ Components & Connections โ–ผ

The Circle of Willis is the most important arterial anastomosis in the body, connecting the anterior and posterior circulations at the base of the brain.

Segment Vessel Connects
Anterior Anterior communicating artery (ACom) Right ACA โ†” Left ACA
Anterolateral A1 segment of ACA (bilateral) ICA โ†’ ACom
Lateral Internal carotid arteries (bilateral) Anterior โ†” Posterior via PCom
Posterolateral Posterior communicating arteries (PCom, bilateral) ICA โ†” PCA
Posterior P1 segment of PCA (bilateral) Basilar โ†’ PCom

Complete circle (textbook): 2 ACAs + ACom + 2 ICAs + 2 PComs + 2 PCAs (P1). This provides collateral flow if one major vessel is occluded.

Anatomical Variants & Clinical Significance โ–ผ

A “complete” Circle of Willis is found in only ~25-50% of the population. Common variants significantly affect stroke risk and collateral capacity.

Variant Prevalence Clinical Significance
Hypoplastic or absent PCom ~30% โ†“ Anterior-posterior collateral; higher stroke risk with ICA occlusion
Hypoplastic or absent A1 ~10% Bilateral ACA territory at risk if remaining A1/ACom occluded
Fetal PCA (PCA from ICA via PCom) ~15-30% PCA territory depends on ICA (not basilar); ICA occlusion โ†’ PCA stroke
Absent ACom ~5% No cross-flow between ACAs
Infundibular dilation (at PCom origin) Common Can mimic aneurysm on imaging; usually benign (<3mm funnel shape)

Circle of Willis โ€“ Common Aneurysm Sites

Location % of Intracranial Aneurysms Classic Presentation
ACom ~30% (most common) Worst headache of life; may cause bilateral ACA ischemia, abulia, memory loss
PCom ~25% CN III palsy (pupil-involving) + headache = until proven otherwise an aneurysm. “Down and out” with dilated pupil
MCA bifurcation ~20% Contralateral weakness/aphasia if rupture; temporal hematoma
Basilar tip ~5-10% Devastating SAH; may compress brainstem
ICA (cavernous/paraclinoid) ~5% May be incidental; cavernous = lower rupture risk
๐Ÿ’Ž Board Pearl

PCom aneurysm = CN III palsy with pupil involvement (dilated, “down and out”). ACom aneurysm = most common overall. Fetal PCA variant (~20%) means PCA territory depends on ICA, not basilar โ†’ changes stroke risk profile and surgical planning.


Posterior Circulation โ€“ Vertebrobasilar & PCA

Vertebral & Basilar Arteries โ€“ Overview โ–ผ

Vertebral arteries: Join to form basilar at pontomedullary junction.

Key branches:

  • PICA โ€“ posterior inferior cerebellar artery
  • Anterior spinal artery
  • AICA โ€“ anterior inferior cerebellar artery
  • SCA โ€“ superior cerebellar artery
  • Paramedian & circumferential branches to brainstem
Posterior Cerebral Artery (PCA) โ–ผ

Origin: Terminal branches of basilar artery.

Territory:

  • Occipital lobe (primary visual cortex)
  • Inferomedial temporal lobes
  • Posterior thalamus
  • Splenium of corpus callosum

PCA Stroke Syndrome:

  • Contralateral homonymous hemianopia ยฑ macular sparing
  • Alexia without agraphia (left PCA + splenium)
  • Visual agnosia, prosopagnosia (ventral occipitotemporal)
  • Thalamic pain syndrome (Dejerineโ€“Roussy) if thalamus involved
  • Bilateral PCA โ†’ cortical blindness ยฑ Anton syndrome

Brainstem & Cerebellar Stroke Syndromes (Pattern Recognition)

Syndrome Artery Localization & Key Features
Lateral Medullary (Wallenberg) PICA (usually vertebral/PICA) โ€ข Vertigo, nystagmus, nausea
โ€ข Ipsilateral facial pain/temp loss (trigeminal nucleus)
โ€ข Contralateral body pain/temp loss (spinothalamic)
โ€ข Dysphagia, hoarseness, diminished gag (nucleus ambiguus) โ€“ “Don’t PICA horse”
โ€ข Ipsilateral Horner’s, ataxia
Lateral Pontine AICA (anterior inferior cerebellar) โ€ข Similar to PICA but more facial nucleus involvement
โ€ข Ipsilateral facial paralysis, โ†“ lacrimation, salivation, taste (ant 2/3)
โ€ข Vertigo, nystagmus
โ€ข Ipsilateral ataxia
โ€ข “Facial droop means AICA’s pooped
Medial Medullary Anterior spinal (branch of vertebral) Triad:
โ€ข Contralateral hemiparesis (corticospinal)
โ€ข Contralateral dorsal column loss (proprioception/vibration)
โ€ข Ipsilateral tongue weakness (CN XII) โ€“ tongue deviates toward lesion
Locked-in Syndrome Basilar ventral pons โ€ข Quadriplegia, anarthria
โ€ข Preserved consciousness & vertical eye movements
โ€ข Result of bilateral corticospinal & corticobulbar tract involvement
Weber Syndrome Paramedian midbrain (PCA branches) โ€ข Ipsilateral CN III palsy
โ€ข Contralateral hemiparesis
โ€ข Classic midbrain “alternating” hemiplegia
Superior Cerebellar Artery (SCA) stroke SCA โ€ข Ipsilateral limb ataxia, dysmetria
โ€ข Nausea, vomiting, nystagmus
โ€ข Contralateral pain/temp loss (body)
โ€ข Facial pain/temp may be spared (vs PICA/AICA)
๐Ÿ’Ž Board Pearl

Posterior circulation strokes often give “crossed findings” โ€“ ipsilateral cranial nerve signs with contralateral motor/sensory deficits.


Cerebral Venous System โ€“ Superficial, Deep & Dural Sinuses

Superficial & Deep Cerebral Veins โ–ผ

Superficial Veins

  • Drain cerebral cortex and subcortical white matter
  • Empty mainly into superior sagittal sinus, transverse sinus
  • Bridging veins traverse subdural space โ†’ rupture โ†’ subdural hematoma, especially with atrophy/trauma

Deep Venous System

  • Internal cerebral veins: Drain deep structures (thalamus, basal ganglia, deep white matter)
  • Join to form the vein of Galen
  • Vein of Galen โ†’ straight sinus โ†’ transverse sinus
Dural Venous Sinuses & Clinical Correlates โ–ผ

Major Dural Sinuses

  • Superior sagittal sinus: Along falx; drains superficial hemispheric veins
  • Inferior sagittal sinus โ†’ straight sinus: Deep midline structures
  • Transverse & sigmoid sinuses: Exit skull via jugular foramen โ†’ internal jugular vein
  • Cavernous sinus: On either side of sella; ICA + CN III, IV, V1, V2, VI inside/along walls

Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis (CVST)

  • Risk factors: Hypercoagulable states, pregnancy/postpartum, OCPs, infection
  • Symptoms: Headache, papilledema, seizures, focal deficits
  • Superior sagittal sinus thrombosis: Bilateral parasagittal weakness, seizures, โ†‘ ICP
  • Lateral (transverse/sigmoid) sinus: Headache, cerebellar signs, raised ICP

Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis

  • Etiology: Often from facial/sinus infections
  • Clinical:
    • Painful ophthalmoplegia (CN III, IV, VI involvement)
    • Decreased corneal reflex (V1)
    • Periorbital edema, proptosis
    • Often bilateral due to intercavernous connections
๐Ÿ’Ž Board Pearl

Key venous patterns: โ€ข Elderly fall + gradual confusion = subdural (bridging veins).
โ€ข Young woman + headache + papilledema + seizure = suspect venous sinus thrombosis.


Vascular Anatomy & Stroke โ€“ Quick Reference

Clinical Finding Most Likely Vessel Localization Clue
Leg > arm weakness, abulia ACA Medial frontal/parietal, anterior cingulate
Face/arm > leg weakness, aphasia Dominant MCA Lateral frontal/parietal, perisylvian
Neglect, left-sided inattention Right MCA (inferior division) Non-dominant parietal/temporal
HH with macular sparing PCA Occipital cortex (dual supply)
HH + dense hemiparesis (face, arm, leg) Proximal M1 or ICA Cortex + internal capsule
HH + hemiparesis + hemisensory loss Anterior choroidal Posterior limb IC + optic tract
Vertigo + ipsilateral face pain/T loss + contralateral body pain/T loss + dysphagia PICA Lateral medulla (Wallenberg)
Painful ophthalmoplegia + proptosis Cavernous sinus (venous) CN III, IV, V1, V2, VI involvement
๐Ÿ’Ž Board Pearl

Think artery = pattern of deficit; think vein/sinus = headache, โ†‘ICP, seizures, multifocal deficits.