AI Article Synopsis

  • Persistent sciatic artery (PSA) is an embryological structure that supplies the lower limb, and if it remains after femoral artery development, it can lead to vascular anomalies like aneurysms.
  • Up to 22% of people with PSA have it bilaterally, and it’s associated with aneurysmal formation in 15% to 46% of cases.
  • The text reviews a reported case of persistent sciatic artery aneurysm (PSAA) which was treated using thrombolysis, arterial reconstruction, and aneurysm embolization, alongside a discussion of the condition's embryology, anatomy, pathology, diagnosis, and treatment.

Article Abstract

Persistent sciatic artery (PSA) is a continuation of the internal iliac artery into the popliteal-tibial vessels and provides the major supply to the lower limb bud in early embryologic development, and its remnants participate in the formation of the inferior gluteal, deep femoral, popliteal, peroneal, and pedal vessels. When the femoral artery develops, the PSA involutes. In rare circumstances it persists and has a bilateral location in 22% of cases of PSA. This rare vascular anomaly is associated with aneurysmal formation in 15% to 46% of cases. Persistent sciatic artery aneurysm (PSAA) was first described in 1864. At present 87 cases, including this case, have been reported in the international literature. The authors describe a patient affected with PSAA and treated with a combination of thrombolysis, arterial reconstruction, and aneurysm embolization in a staged fashion. Embryology, anatomy, pathology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and treatment of this rare disease are briefly discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/153857440203600513DOI Listing

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