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Cervical Carotid Artery Dissection

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Before we talk about the scale for

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looking at blunt vascular injury,

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I did want to go through this quick collage of the

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different findings that you can see associated

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with internal carotid artery or common

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carotid artery dissection.

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Here what we see is the narrowing of the internal

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carotid artery as well as the lowdensity

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wall hematoma. In the dissection.

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Here we see the flap of the dissection with 2

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upper middle image here we see reduction in the

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luminal diameter of the internal choroid artery

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compared with the left internal choroid artery

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as well as a laterally projecting wall clot.

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And on the MRI scan we see that in this case the

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luminal diameter actually is, if anything,

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a little bit larger than the contralateral side.

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But there is wall hematoma.

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This is a fat sat t one.

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Weighted scan where the lumen is normal,

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but the wall shows abnormal signal

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intensity in this dissection.

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And just a reminder that with these dissections,

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you can have a potential pseudo

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aneurysm formation.

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You see the narrowing of the carotid artery lumen

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and dissection with the pseudo aneurysm.

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Now, the previous slide, I believe,

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had said that only 5% of cases showed development

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of pseudo aneurysms. However, this is a paper.

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In 2016,

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they looked at 370 patients with carotid

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and vertebral artery dissections.

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And of those they report,

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30% developed one or more pseudo aneurysms,

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and they were more common in the carotid

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artery than in the vertebral artery.

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So that's the range that you can see

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in the literature from 5% to 30%.

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A pretty broad range, I might add.

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So let's talk about the scale that we use

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for looking. At neurovascular injury.

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This is what's known as the bifil scale.

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And grade one has irregularity with

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only less than 25% stenosis.

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Grade two is a dissection with greater than 25%

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luminal narrowing or a visible intimal flap.

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Grade three is pseudo aneurysm.

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Grade four is complete occlusion,

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and grade five is transection

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with contrast extravasation.

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I've actually shown you examples of each of these.

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The active contrast extravasation in that lower

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left neck aneurysm in the patient

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who had miliory TB.

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We saw one where the blood vessel was completely

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occluded. We've seen pseudo aneurysms,

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we've seen in the previous slide, the flap,

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and we've seen one where are the luminal diameters

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greater than 25% narrowed versus those where it's

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less than 25% narrowed. This is the so called.

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Scale for Blunt Cerebrovascular injury.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Trauma

Neuroradiology

Neuro

MRI

Head and Neck

CT

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