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Carotid Blowout

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This was an individual who had had surgery on the

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neck as well as radiation on the neck

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for a cancer of the oropharynx.

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The patient presented with neurologic deficits

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on the left side of the body,

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and they were concerned about the right internal

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carotid artery in the operated and radiated field.

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So let's follow up the CTA here.

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How do we know this is CTA? We're seeing the artery,

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but not the vein.

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So this has been timed to show the carotid artery

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and the vertebral artery. As we proceed upward,

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we see the changes that are manifest

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from radiation treatment,

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and that is diffuse edema of the subcutaneous fat,

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diffuse edema of the platysma muscle.

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The supraglottic larynx, as you can see,

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is swollen with mucosal thickening.

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The whole neck just kind of looks a little

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bit dirty fat. As we continue superiorly,

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we come to the carotid bifurcation.

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We're not looking too bad.

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You can see that the common carotid artery has soft

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tissue around it and loss of the fat planes

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compared to the left side. It doesn't look too bad.

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Here's the...

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if we follow this right internal carotid artery,

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we see the left on the contralateral side,

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and we see there is a change in

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the lumen between the two.

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But as we follow this internal carotid artery

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superiorly, we see that we lose it.

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It just kind of, the lumen narrows dramatically,

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and we have all of this soft tissue thickening. Here's

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the normal left internal carotid artery and the

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normal parapharyngeal space. Here's the styloid process.

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Here we have loss of the internal carotid artery

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and this soft tissue here. At arteriography,

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this was what we would call a carotid blowout.

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You can actually see some of the luminary irregularity

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and some contrast leaking out of the

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internal carotid artery. So how does this happen?

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Well, the carotid artery typically can tolerate

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radiation therapy, obviously,

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because we do a lot of radiation therapy to the neck.

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In this setting where you had both surgery

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as well as radiation therapy,

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the wall of the carotid artery was injured and this

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patient's carotid artery kind of exploded into this

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parapharyngeal space and you had

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what is called carotid blowout.

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So any radiated operated right internal carotid

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artery where the lumen has been violated and this

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whole process here was clotted up blood

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in the parapharyngeal space,

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carotid blowout on the right side.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Neuroradiology

Neuro

Iatrogenic

Head and Neck

CT

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