Basilar Artery Changes in Fabry Disease

2017 
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Dolichoectasia of the basilar artery is a characteristic finding of Fabry disease. However, its prevalence, severity, and course have been poorly studied. This study quantitatively evaluated, by MRA, a panel of basilar artery parameters in a large cohort of patients with Fabry disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Basilar artery mean diameter, curved length, “origin-to-end” linear distance (linear length), and tortuosity index ([curved length ÷ linear length] − 1) were retrospectively measured on 1.5T MRA studies of 110 patients with Fabry disease (mean age, 39.4 ± 18.6 years; 40 males) and 108 control patients (mean age, 42.0 ± 18.2 years; 40 males). RESULTS: Patients with Fabry disease had increased basilar artery mean diameter ( P P = .02) compared with control patients. Basilar artery curved length and tortuosity index correlated with age in both groups ( P P = .002). Patients with Fabry disease showed a basilar artery curved length mean increase of 4.2% (9.7% in male patients with Fabry disease versus male control patients), whereas the basilar artery mean diameter had a mean increase of 12.4% (14.3% in male patients with Fabry disease versus male control patients). Male patients with Fabry disease had increased basilar artery mean diameter, curved length, and tortuosity index compared with female patients with Fabry disease ( P = .04, P = .02, and P P P = .01, and P = .006, respectively). Female patients with Fabry disease demonstrated an age-dependent increase of basilar artery mean diameter that became significant ( P CONCLUSIONS: The basilar artery of patients with FD is subjected to major remodeling that differs according to age and sex, thus providing interesting clues about the pathophysiology of cerebral vessels in Fabry disease.
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