AI Article Synopsis

  • Alterations in the basilar artery (BA) anatomy may be linked to Fabry disease (FD), but their clinical significance is unclear due to a lack of data on their impact on patient outcomes.
  • A study involving brain MRIs of 53 FD subjects assessed the BA diameter and tortuosity index but found no significant correlations with clinical or imaging data.
  • The stability of BA metrics over a 2-year follow-up period indicates that these vessel changes do not predict patient clinical status, suggesting a need to reevaluate their role in the context of FD.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose: Alterations of the basilar artery (BA) anatomy have been suggested as a possible MRA feature of Fabry disease (FD). Nonetheless, no information about their clinical or pathophysiologic correlates is available, limiting our comprehension of the real impact of vessel remodeling in FD.

Materials And Methods: Brain MRIs of 53 subjects with FD (mean age, 40.7 [SD, 12.4] years; male/female ratio = 23:30) were collected in this single-center study. Mean BA diameter and its tortuosity index were calculated on MRA. Possible correlations between these metrics and clinical, laboratory, and advanced imaging variables of the posterior circulation were tested. In a subgroup of 20 subjects, a 2-year clinical and imaging follow-up was available, and possible longitudinal changes of these metrics and their ability to predict clinical scores were also probed.

Results: No significant association was found between MRA metrics and any clinical, laboratory, or advanced imaging variable ( values ranging from -0.006 to 0.32). At the follow-up examination, no changes were observed with time for the mean BA diameter ( = .84) and the tortuosity index ( = .70). Finally, baseline MRA variables failed to predict the clinical status of patients with FD at follow-up ( = .42 and 0.66, respectively).

Conclusions: Alterations of the BA in FD lack of any meaningful association with clinical, laboratory, or advanced imaging findings collected in this study. Furthermore, this lack of correlation seems constant across time, suggesting stability over time. Taken together, these results suggest that the role of BA dolichoectasia in FD should be reconsidered.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11543084PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A8403DOI Listing

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