Most commonly affected are the
vertebral and
basilar arteries (Vertebral Basilar Dolichoectasia or Vertebrobasillar Dolichoectasia). The
internal carotid artery may also be affected. Patients with Autosomal Dominant
Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD) are more likely to be subject to dolichoectasias. Dolichoectasias are most common in elderly males. In cases involving the basilar artery (VBD), pathology can occur due to direct compression of cranial nerves, by ischemia related to the dolichoectatic vessel, or by the development of hydrocephalus. Rupture of the dolichoectatic vessel can lead to catastrophic
intracerebral hemorrhage. Internal carotid artery dolichoectasia is particularly interesting because the artery normally already contains one hairpin turn. Seen in an MRI as two individual arteries at this hairpin, a carotid artery dolichoectasia can progress so far as to produce a second hairpin turn and appear as three individual arteries on an MRI. In the case of a dolichoectasia of the Internal Carotid Artery (ICD), the pathogenesis is primarily related to compression of the optic nerves at the
optic chiasma (see Fig. 1 and 2). == Treatment ==