摘要
OBJECTIVE Internal carotid artery (ICA) bifurcation (ICAB) aneurysms carry high rupture risk, treatment challenges, and recurrence due to complex morphology and origination patterns. Given their relatively low incidence, research on ICAB morphology is limited. This study analyzed ICAB morphology in aneurysmal, contralateral, and healthy bifurcations, highlighting bilateral differences, anterior cerebral artery (ACA) dominance, and deviations from the vascular optimality principle (VOP). METHODS A total of 194 angiographic volumes (40 aneurysmal, 28 contralateral, 126 healthy) were evaluated. ICAB morphology included parent/daughter vessel diameters and angle between the ICA and middle cerebral artery (MCA; Ф MCA ), angle between the ICA and ACA (Ф ACA ), total ICAB angle (Ф ICAB ; Ф MCA + Ф ACA ). Aneurysm characteristics (size, neck, origination) and VOP parameters (radius ratio [RR] and junction exponent [ n ]) were evaluated. Bilateral analysis accounted for ACA dominance. RESULTS Compared with controls, aneurysmal ICABs exhibited wider Φ MCA (57.22° ± 12.22° vs 43.74° ± 9.41°, p < 0.001; area under the curve [AUC] = 0.83) and Φ ICAB (160.27° ± 16.16° vs 143.66° ± 10.74°, p < 0.001; AUC = 0.79), but not Φ ACA , in univariate, multivariate (AUC = 0.85), and bilateral analyses. Angle thresholds of 51.7° for Φ MCA and 152.4° for Φ ICAB were identified. Aneurysms originated predominantly off the apex (65%) and ACA (30%). Most occurred on ICABs with dominant (31%) and codominant (58%) A1 segments. Aneurysm neck, but not size, correlated with Φ MCA and Φ ICAB, but not Φ ACA . In controls, Φ MCA was larger and Φ ACA smaller on the dominant A1 side, with no Φ ICAB difference. There was no statistically significant difference in RR and n values regardless of aneurysm presence and dominance status. CONCLUSIONS Aneurysmal ICABs have wider bifurcation angles that are more predominant on the MCA side compared with healthy controls. Only 10% of the aneurysms were found to occur on ICABs with the nondominant A1 segment. A1 dominance status influences bifurcation morphology not only in aneurysmal ICABs but also in healthy controls. These findings underline the importance of ICAB morphology for the likelihood of aneurysm presence, an association that can inform clinical decisions and may serve in predictive analytics.