Skull base fractures are defined as fractures involving the floor of the anterior, middle, or posterior cranial fossae, constituting a broad category of injuries owing to complex local anatomic relationships, irregular skull geometry, and differences in material properties of the skull base, its contents, and adjacent structures. Fractures can result from direct impact or inertial loading force, resulting in injury from local interaction with bones, ligaments, muscles, and neurovascular structures in the basilar skull [1].
Intracranial arterial vessels are more susceptible to rotational and shear forces because they are thinner and stiffer than extracranial segments, attributed to the absence of an external elastic lamina and the presence of a stiffer internal elastic lamina. Differences in material properties of the adjacent structures of the skull base and resulting differences in momentum can lead to arterial dissection, post-traumatic aneurysm formation, and the creation of dural arterial-venous fistulae. While vascular complications of the cervical vessels may also arise from skull base trauma due to shear and rotational forces, this review primarily focuses on intracranial cerebrovascular injuries.
Skull base fractures have been reported in 3.5 to 24% of overall skull fractures and 4% of overall head injuries [2]. Motor vehicle collisions are the most prevalent cause of skull base injuries, with the majority of injuries resulting from direct impact with rigid objects [3]. Cerebrovascular injuries have been detected in 8.5% of cases involving blunt skull base fractures, and there is a strong correlation with fractures that affect the sella turcica-sphenoid sinus complex, petrous carotid canal, and occipital condyles [4,5,6]. The risk for stroke attributable to blunt cerebrovascular injury ranges from 1 to 10% [7,8,9]. For patients with higher-grade vessel injuries, the risk can increase as much as 33%, with mortality rates ranging from 15 to 59% [9, 10].
Blunt cerebrovascular injury can be stratified using a five-point Biffle scale based on the severity of vessel injury, ranging from mild intimal injury (Grade I) to vessel transection (Grade V) (Table 1) [11]. Grade I injuries tend to spontaneously resolve in two-thirds of cases, whereas Grade V injuries are almost universally fatal [4, 11]. High-grade injuries are more likely to deteriorate compared to low-grade injuries and are associated with higher rates of stroke [9, 12].
Table 1 Biffl scale for blunt cerebrovascular injuryImaging plays a crucial role in the evaluation of vascular injuries resulting from skull base trauma. Computed Tomography Angiogram (CTA), with its rapid acquisition, high diagnostic accuracy, and wide availability, is the primary non-invasive imaging modality in the setting of suspected cerebrovascular injury. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)/Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) and vessel wall image (VWI) can offer additional diagnostic value in equivocal cases and provide better assessment of cerebral ischemic infarction associated with cerebrovascular injury. Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA), with its superior spatial and temporal resolution, remains the gold standard for diagnosing cerebral vascular injuries. Duplex ultrasound is not the preferred choice for evaluating traumatic cerebrovascular injuries and is not recommended by the EAST guidelines [13], primarily due to its low sensitivity for detecting vessel dissection, difficulty in sonographically accessing the vascular segments at the skull base.
Relevant anatomyThe skull base is classically divided into three regions: the anterior cranial fossa (ACF), which comprises the orbital plate of the frontal bone, the lesser wings of the sphenoid, and the cribriform plate of ethmoid bone; the middle cranial fossa (MCF), including the greater wing of the sphenoid and the temporal bone; and the posterior cranial fossa (PCF), primarily composed of the occipital bone and the squamous and mastoid portions of the temporal bone. The skull base has various foramina and canals that transmit important neurovascular structures. In this review, we will focus our discussion on the skull base structures that are most relevant to traumatic cerebrovascular injuries (Table 2).
Table 2 Skull base structures that are most susceptible to cerebrovascular injuriesAnterior cranial fossaThe ACF is defined laterally by the orbital plate of the frontal bone, medially by the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone, and posteriorly by the tuberculum sellae and the lesser wing of the sphenoid bone. The anterior ethmoidal artery, a branch of the ophthalmic artery, enters the anterior cranial fossa through the ethmoidal foramen, which is a small opening in the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone. This region is susceptible to fracture of the cribriform plate, which can result in injuries to the anterior ethmoidal artery. The anterior caudal aspect of the groove of the superior sagittal sinus merges at midline with the anterior cranial fossa from the frontal crest. This region serves as the anterior attachment site for the superior sagittal sinus, which provides protective stabilization in most forms of trauma. Nevertheless, a direct injury to the frontal table can also result in a corresponding venous injury.
Middle cranial fossaThe sphenoid and temporal bones form the MCF. Its boundaries are defined by tuberculum sellae and the lesser wing of sphenoid anteriorly, the greater wing of sphenoid and squamous temporal bone laterally, and dorsum sellae and petrous ridge posteriorly. It comprises a central and lateral compartment, divided by an arbitrary line known as the petrous-clinoid line, connecting the tip of the anterior clinoid process to the petrous apex [14]. The central compartment contains the sella turcica and the lateral compartment houses the temporal lobe. The MCF contains multiple canals, foramina, and grooves housing many important neurovascular structures. In the context of this review, we will primarily focus on the relevant vascular structures in this region, and specifically the internal carotid artery (ICA) and the cavernous sinus.
The carotid canal is located within the petrous temporal bone of the MCF, which houses the petrous segment of the ICA (C2). The petrous segment of ICA is encased within the periosteum of the carotid canal. This segment has three parts: a vertical portion, a bend, and a horizontal portion [15, 16]. Along its course, the petrous ICA travels anteromedial to the tympanic cavity at the bend and medial to the eustachian tube at the horizontal portion. The petrous segment ends along the posterior foramen lacerum inferomedial to the edge of Meckel’s cave at the terminus of the carotid canal [16]. The lacerum segment (C3) begins at the end of the carotid canal, courses above without traversing the foramen lacerum, and ascends along the vertical canal of foramen lacerum. The lacerum segment ends at the superior margin of the petrolingual ligament, a continuation of the periosteum of the carotid canal. It enters the posterior cavernous sinus, where it becomes the cavernous segment.
The cavernous segment (C4) comprises a vertical portion, a posterior bend, a horizontal portion, and an anterior bend. The C4 segment typically gives rise to the meningohypophyseal trunk posteriorly, the inferolateral trunk laterally to the horizontal portion of the C4 segment. The C4 segment ends at the proximal dural ring formed by the junction of the medial and inferior periosteum of the anterior clinoid process [16].
The clinoid segment (C5) is a short segment coursing between the proximal and distal dural ring craniocaudally. It traverses between the anterior clinoid process and the carotid sulcus of the basisphenoid. Upon exiting the dural ring and entering the subarachnoid space, it becomes the ophthalmic segment (C6). Within the intradural C6 segment, it commonly gives rise to the ophthalmic artery and the superior hypophyseal artery [16, 17]. The communicating segment (C7) begins just proximal to the origin of the posterior communicating artery (PComA) and ends at the ICA bifurcation of the anterior cerebral artery and middle cerebral artery. Along the course of the C7 segment, it gives rise to the PComA and the anterior choroidal artery [16].
The cavernous sinuses are a pair of interconnected networks of venous channels within the central MCF that extend from the superior orbital fissure to the petrous apex. The cavernous sinuses are bounded by meningeal and periosteal dura layers; the medial wall, being the weakest, consists of a single dural layer, while the other walls comprise both layers [18]. The cavernous sinus houses the ICA and its associated sympathetic plexuses, as well as cranial nerves II, III, IV, and V1 [19]. The cavernous sinus drains the superior and inferior ophthalmic veins, pterygoid plexus, Sylvian vein, and sphenoid parietal sinus into the superior and inferior petrosal sinuses.
Posterior cranial fossaThe PCF houses the brain stem and cerebellum and is formed by the occipital bone and temporal bones. The anatomical boundaries are defined by the clivus, which forms the anteromedial boundary; the posterior edge of the petrous temporal bone, which forms the anterolateral boundary; the squamous occipital bone, which constitutes the posterior boundary; and the mastoid temporal bone, squamous, condylar, and basilar parts of the occipital bone, forming the floor of the PCF.
The vertebral arteries enter the dural ring through the foramen magnum and commonly give rise to the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA). Recognition of the variant anatomies of PICA is important for accurate identification of commonly encountered injuries in clinical practice, and include extradural PICA, PICA as a terminal branch of the vertebral artery, PICA with the basilar artery origin, and multiple PICA branches. Another common variant is the AICA-PICA variant, in which AICA supplies the distal PICA territory in the absence of PICA and vice versa [20]. At the foramen magnum, the distal vertebral arteries typically supply the anterior spinal arteries, posterior spinal arteries, and posterior meningeal artery, though tremendous variability of anatomy exists [21]. Injuries involving the intradural vertebral artery at the skull base are associated with occipital condyle fracture (OCF), and in particular, occipital condyle avulsion fracture (Type III OCF) [6].
The sigmoid sinus courses along the sigmoid groove in the occipital bone, which drains into the internal jugular vein in the jugular foramen at the proximal end of the sigmoid groove. The jugular foramen sits in the posterior aspect of the petro-occipital suture and is separated anteriorly from the carotid canal by the caroticojugular spine. The jugular foramen sits lateral to the hypoglossal canal, separated by the jugular tubercle [22]. The jugular foramen is divided into two compartments by the jugular spine: the anteromedial compartment known as the par nervosa, houses the inferior petrosal sinus, and glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX), and the posterolateral compartment, known as the par vascularis, contains the jugular bulb, vagus nerve (CN X) and spinal accessory nerve (CN XI) [22]. The transverse-sigmoid sinuses and internal jugular vein are at risk of developing dural venous sinus thrombosis (DVST) as a result of the adjacent skull base fracture.
Screening criteriaImaging is an essential part of trauma assessment, especially when evaluating skull base injuries. These injuries often result from high-energy mechanisms, and patients may be obtunded, which limits effective clinical assessment. In addition, there can be a delay between the injury and the onset of symptoms, and up to 80% of BCVI cases begin without initial symptom [23, 24]. Symptoms related to skull base injuries, including unexplained focal neurological deficits and arterial epistaxis, have high associations with blunt cerebrovascular injury (BCVI) (38–100%) [24,25,26] and warrant further imaging assessment to pursue the diagnosis [25]. Screening asymptomatic patients at risk for BCVI is more controversial. However, the majority of data support the recommendation that patients at risk for BCVI can be identified before the onset of symptoms with the appropriate screening [13, 26,27,28,29].
Several sets of criteria have been put forth to screen for BCVI in at-risk patients. These include Modified Denver Criteria, Memphis Criteria, and Boston Criteria (Tables 3, 4 and 5) [30,31,32]. Of these criteria, the modified Denver Criteria [33] have undergone the most extensive study and are widely used. The criteria have been endorsed by both the EAST and the Western Trauma Association [13, 34, 35]. Recent studies have suggested broadening the screening criteria to encompass additional clinical and radiological risk factors with suggested expansion including thoracic injuries, scalp degloving, thoracic vascular injuries, blunt cardiac rupture, and upper rib fracture (ribs 1–6) [36,37,38].
Table 3 Modified Denver Criteria for BCVI Imaging modalitiesThe initial trauma imaging assessment starts with non-contrast CT of the head and cervical spine. Multidetector CT, with its rapid acquisition and wide availability, is the primary imaging modality in the initial evaluation of the skull base trauma. Reformatted images in orthogonal planes in bone and soft tissue kernels after initial thin section volumetric acquisition in the axial plane offer anatomic evaluation and assessment of soft tissue and osseous injuries with high sensitivity and specificity.
The imaging evaluation of traumatic cerebrovascular injuries encompasses various modalities, including CTA, MRI/MRA, or DSA. CTA head and neck, with its fast scan time and wide availability, is the primary imaging choice for initial screening and diagnosis of BCVI. CTA provides high spatial and contrast resolution images of arterial lumen and wall. The utilization of ≥ 16 slice multidetector CTA is recommended for identifying BCVI according to most guidelines [36]. CTA trauma assessment requires scanning of the entire length of the carotid and vertebral arteries from the aortic arch to the circle of Willis. Automatic bolus tracking techniques are commonly employed to optimize the timing of contrast injection. At our institution, CTAs are performed with 64-slice CT scanners, acquiring source images with a 0.625 mm slice thickness. Post-processing images for comprehensive vessel assessment include multiplanar thin slab maximum intensity projection (MIP) reconstructions, curved planar reformats, and 3D rotational MIP reconstructions.
CTAs are highly accurate in identifying BCVI with sensitivities of 64–98% and specificities of 92–100% compared to DSA [39,40,41,42]. The diagnostic accuracy of CTA may be limited by artifacts such as volume averaging, motion, beam-hardening, and less-than-optimal timing of the contrast bolus. However, CTA can effectively identify most clinically significant vascular injuries. False-negative results are more typical of low-grade vessel injuries with lower reported incidence of subsequent ischemic stroke [43].
Although MRI/MRA has generally been excluded as a screening tool for detecting BCVI due to the long scanning times, limited availability, and high relative cost [44], it can provide complementary diagnostic values in patients with suspected BCVI. Standard MRI provides more sensitive means for identifying acute cerebral infarction in the setting of suspected cerebrovascular injury and additional diagnostic information of related intracranial trauma such as diffuse axonal injury. The time-of-flight (TOF) technique can assess the patency of cerebrovascular structures without the need for intravenous contrast. Axial T1 sequence with fat saturation allows for accurate assessment of subacute intramural hematoma, which is characterized by crescent-shaped intrinsic T1 hyperintensity. MRA generally has lower diagnostic accuracy for identifying BCVI when compared to CTA and DSA. The reported sensitivity of MRA for detecting BCVI is between 50 and 75% and a specificity of 67% compared to DSA [41, 43, 45]. MRA is generally not recommended as the sole modality for screening BCVI [13].
Vessel Wall Imaging (VMI) can serve as a supplementary imaging technique, potentially enhancing diagnostic accuracy in high-risk patients by providing additional diagnostic insight in cases where differentiation between intracranial arterial dissection, atherosclerotic plaque, vasculitis, and other causes of arterial luminal narrowing is equivocal or challenging. VWI utilizes CSF and luminal blood signal suppression techniques to better delineate intracranial arterial vessel walls. This technique requires high spatial resolution and high signal-to-noise ratio and is therefore best suited for 3T scanners over scanners of lower field strength [46]. Intracranial arterial dissection on VWI is characterized by a curvilinear T2 hyperintense intimal flap separating the true and false lumens or an intramural hematoma with eccentric arterial wall thickening commonly containing intrinsic T1 hyperintensity typical of early subacute blood product [46].
DSA has superior spatial and temporal resolution for vascular imaging and is considered the gold standard for diagnosis of BCVI, though it has certain limitations. It is an invasive procedure that may not be feasible to perform in patients with additional critical traumatic injuries. Interventional radiology procedures require more time than noninvasive imaging and may result in a delay in diagnosis. Furthermore, it provides no information regarding vessel wall hematomas. In most cases, DSA is reserved for confirmatory and adjunct imaging modality in patients with equivocal CTA findings, and in cases where endovascular repair is anticipated.
Duplex ultrasound has low sensitivity for detecting BCVI (38.5-86%) and a limited acoustic window for assessing vessel injuries at the skull base [34, 40]. Vascular ultrasound is not a recommended imaging modality for evaluating BCVI by EAST guidelines [13].
The spectrum of vascular complications from skull base traumaAnterior cranial fossa dural arterial venous fistulas (ACF-dAVFs)Fractures through the cribriform plate with extension to the anterior or posterior ethmoidal foremen may result in vessel injuries to the branches of ophthalmic arteries, specifically the anterior and posterior ethmoidal arteries. A known complication is the formation of anterior cranial fossa dural arterial-venous fistulae (ACF-dAVFs) [47, 48]. In ACF-dAVF, fistulization frequently occurs at the cribriform plate, where the afferent arterial blood supply arises from the distal ophthalmic artery and both anterior and posterior ethmoidal arteries. The venous return is typically through the frontal cortical veins, which drain into the superior frontal sinus or posteriorly into the cavernous sinus or basal vein of Rosenthal [49, 50].
ACF-dAVFs often demonstrate enlarged cortical veins along the cribriform plates (Fig. 1). In some cases, varices of adjacent cortical veins may also be present. MRI often demonstrates flow voids of enlarged cortical veins in the ACF as evidence of dAVF. DSA is the gold standard for diagnosing dAVF and typically identifies the presence of arterial-venous shunting from ethmoidal branches of the ophthalmic artery to enlarged cortical veins.
Fig. 1ACF dAVF. A 45-year-old male presented with severe craniofacial trauma involving the frontobasal distribution with skull base fractures extending along the ethmoid plates and left sphenoid sinus wall. The initial CTA demonstrated enlarged cortical veins along the right anterior cranial fossa (A) and prominent right ophthalmic and ethmoidal arteries (C). The MRI showed prominent flow voids of the enlarged cortical veins (B). On the CTA, the fistula point (black arrowhead) is centered at the fractured cribriform plate (D). Lateral and oblique internal carotid artery injections on the initial DSA demonstrated a fistulous connection between the ethmoidal branches of the ophthalmic artery with early venous drainage into the superior sagittal sinus (E and F)
ACF-dAVF is known to carry a significant risk of intracranial hemorrhage due to venous drainage through fragile cortical pial veins. High-grade lesions are typically treated with trans-arterial, transvenous, or combined endovascular techniques. Surgical resection is generally reserved for difficult-to-access aneurysm locations. For low-grade lesions and those not amenable to endovascular or surgical treatment, conservative management with surveillance imaging is often employed.
Post-traumatic ICA dissectionCarotid artery injury has been reported in approximately 1% of patients with blunt head trauma [26, 28]. The blunt force in a skull base trauma induces a differential change in momentum along the osseous structures and more elastic vascular structures. The abrupt immobility of the ICA as it enters the skull base at the carotid canal is a recognized area of vulnerability [51]. Once shearing is initiated, the energy leads to the separation of the vascular layers, resulting in dissection by the penetration of blood into the arterial wall through a primary tear [52]. The dissection typically extends downstream in the direction of the blood flow, with blood accumulating in the subintimal layer (between the intima and media) or the subadventitial layer (between the media and adventitia) [53]. The intramural hematoma in ICA dissection typically results in a narrow eccentric lumen with an increased external caliber of the artery, which may cause vessel stenosis or occlusion.
Clinical manifestations of ICA dissection vary depending on the degree of luminal narrowing and the presence of thromboembolism. High-grade stenosis, occlusion, or thromboembolic events arising from vessel injury are more likely to lead to focal neurological deficits from ischemic infarction, whereas low-grade narrowing can manifest with localized or transient symptoms. Local symptoms include head, facial, or neck pain, Horner syndrome, pulsatile tinnitus, and cranial nerve palsy [54, 55]. It is worth noting that up to 80% of patients with BCVI have latent clinical manifestations from the time of the injury, and it is during this period that imaging provides the highest value for diagnosing and guiding clinical management [23].
Common imaging features in CTA for arterial dissections include intraluminal narrowing with crescentic mural thickening, the presence of an intimal flap, and vessel irregularities with luminal narrowing (Fig. 2). In MRI, the intramural hematoma often exhibits changes in signal intensity as a result of the paramagnetic effect caused by the breakdown of hemoglobin in evolving hemorrhage [52]. The subacute phase, which contains methemoglobin, typically demonstrates high intrinsic T1 signal intensity, best shown on the fat-saturated T1-weighted sequence. The subacute intramural hematoma is, therefore, characterized by a peripheral, often eccentric rim of T1-signal hyperintensity encircling the flow void of the vessel lumen. DSA is considered the gold standard for diagnosing dissection due to its superior special and temporal resolution. Intimal flap, “string sign”, double lumen, and “flame sign” are common findings in DSA.
Fig. 2Petrous ICA dissection. A 19-year-old male presents after MVC with left parietal open depressed skull fracture, nondisplaced right temporal bone fracture, and diffuse SAH. The initial CTA demonstrated vessel irregularity of the proximal right petrous ICA (A). There was an absence of contrast opacification from the proximal cervical ICA to the proximal petrous ICA (B and C). Right lateral ICA injection of DSA (D) demonstrated Biffl Grade II flow-limiting dissection of the right petrous ICA
Patients with low-grade dissections are typically treated conservatively with close observation and anticoagulation if not otherwise contraindicated. Endovascular treatment for dissection is reserved for patients with flow-limiting/occlusive vascular lesions, associated expanding or symptomatic pseudoaneurysm (discussed below), and contraindications to anticoagulation such as intracranial or systemic hemorrhage. The treatment goals are to minimize the progression of vessel injury, decrease the incidence of ischemic events, and improve overall neurologic and survival outcomes [
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