“…1,18,24,35,38,40,53 Other authors use the term to describe such aneurysms of both the ICA and basilar artery, 3,7,36,48,52 and some authors include such aneurysms of the middle cerebral artery (MCA), anterior cerebral artery (ACA), vertebral artery (VA), posterior cerebral artery (PCA), and posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA). 4,15,31,35,45,46,49 Whether blister aneurysms of the dorsal ICA have the same or different pathogenesis and natural history as similarly shaped aneurysms of nonbranching sites of other cerebral arteries has not been proven.Perhaps due to the rarity of blister aneurysms, the described pathogenesis is not conclusive. Histological examination of blister aneurysms usually reveals a gap in the arterial wall covered by thin, fibrinous tissue, suggesting that the entity is, in fact, a type of pseudoaneurysm ( Figs.…”