Morphometric Analysis of the Anterior Clinoid Process and Its Relationship With the Internal Carotid Artery Using MDCT Angiography
Büşra Şeker, Musa Acar, Sultan Uğur
The anterior clinoid process (ACP) is a critical osseous structure in skull base surgery because of its close anatomic relationship with the optic nerve and internal carotid artery (ICA). This study aimed to evaluate the morphometric characteristics of the ACP and its relationship with adjacent ICA segments using computed tomography angiography (CTA) in a Turkish population. Cranial CTA images of 200 patients (100 males and 100 females; aged 20–65 y) were retrospectively analyzed. ACP length, width, apical angle, distance to the sagittal midline, and distances to the C4 and C5 ICA segments were measured bilaterally using multiplanar reconstructions in 3D Slicer software. No significant sex differences were observed in ACP length, width, angle, or midline distance (