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Vertebral Artery Dissection, Pseudoaneurysm

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This was a young woman who was in a motor vehicle collision

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and presented with neck pain and headache

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after the motor vehicle collision,

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patient had a brief episode of loss of consciousness.

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The initial CT scan, as I show it, is unremarkable.

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No evidence of hemorrhage, no evidence of hydrocephalus,

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no evidence of extra-axial collections.

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And since we are focused right now on dissections and clots,

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we look at the intracranial vessels and we don't

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see any hyperdense vessels in the brain.

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The patient had bone windows which were also negative

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because of the patient's neck pain.

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The patient also had a cervical spine CT scan at

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the same setting and this too was negative.

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Shortly thereafter,

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the patient developed some element of dysmetria apparent on

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physical examination during the time

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within the emergency room visit.

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Because of the new neurologic symptoms and

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the persistence of left-sided neck pain,

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the patient had an MRI scan as well as an MRA of the neck.

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So let's look at that next.

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This is the flare scan of the patient's brain and

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on initial view of it, it looked pretty good.

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However, as you can see, in the posterior fossa,

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one has a small area of high signal intensity seen

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in the posterior portion of the cerebellum.

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And in the inferior lateral left side of the cerebellum,

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there seems to be an area of hyperintensity.

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On flare imaging,

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the diffusion-weighted scan was next

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performed and as you can see,

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there is a small area of high signal intensity in the

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lateral aspect of the left side of the cerebellum.

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Now,

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this is an area where one has susceptibility artifact

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at the air-bone interface and brain-bone interface.

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So this hyperintensity around the periphery

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of the cerebellum is normal.

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However,

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this was a more focal area of high signal intensity that was

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worrisome for potential early stroke and was also

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seen on the flare imaging.

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For this reason,

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the patient proceeded to MRA of

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the neck as well as the brain.

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I'm going to show the maximum intensity projection

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images from the left side of the vasculature.

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This is the internal carotid artery on the left side

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arising from the aorta. And as you can see,

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the bifurcation looks good and there

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are no dramatic areas of contour.

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Or luminal abnormality. However,

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within the left vertebral artery.

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To identify this,

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you see the left subclavian artery and the

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origin of the left vertebral artery.

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The left vertebral artery as one ascends one comes to

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this area of marked dilatation of the blood vessel,

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a pseudoaneurysm and distal to the pseudoaneurysm you

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can see that there is an area of vascular narrowing.

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Let me see whether I can magnify this a

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little bit for you all.

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There we go.

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So pseudoaneurysm with distal area of narrowing and in

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point of fact proximal to the pseudoaneurysm

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you see a small area of narrowing as well.

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And this is from

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the MRA of the neck.

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One thing that I will recommend when looking for dissected

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blood vessels you should do a spin echo fat-suppressed

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T1-weighted scan to look for clots in the vessel.

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Remember that high signal intensity clot will be obscured by

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adjacent fat if you do not apply a fat suppression

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technique in order to see clots in the vessel.

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On Spin-echo imaging.

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What I generally like to do with my cases in which I'm

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concerned about dissection is take the raw data here from

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the Gadolinium-enhanced MRA and create a multiplanar

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reconstruction in the axial plane.

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And that way you can see the blood vessel in cross-section

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in order to define whether or not there is clot in the

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wall or whether there is a focal area of dilatation.

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As you can see in this case,

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we have a dramatic change in the caliber of the blood vessel

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on cross-sectional imaging representing the pseudoaneurysm.

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So as I said previously,

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dissections and pseudoaneurysms of blood vessels are much

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more common in the neck after trauma than intracranially.

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And this is a good example of a vertebral artery dissection

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defined by the narrowing of the blood vessel proximal

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and distal to an area of pseudoaneurysm.

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Why do I say pseudoaneurysm?

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This is because the wall of the blood

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vessel has been traumatized.

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This, depending on whether or not the patient is having neurologic

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symptoms or demonstrating that this

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is a source of thromboembolism.

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The patients may be treated either conservatively with

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medical management or if the patient is

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throwing clots and having strokes,

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more likely the patient will be treated with stenting.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Trauma

Physics and Basic Science

Neuroradiology

Neck soft tissues

MRI

Interventional

Emergency

CT

Brain

Angiography

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