CV
Vertebral Artery Dissection
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Vertebral Artery Dissection
, Vertebral Dissection, Vertebrobasilar Dissection
See Also
Cervical Artery Dissection
Cerebrovascular Accident of Vertebral Artery
Vertebral Artery Injury in Blunt Neck Trauma
Carotid Artery Dissection
Epidemiology
Incidence
: 1 to 1.5 per 100,000
Cerebroarterial Dissection
s (
Carotid Artery
and
Vertebral Artery
) are uncommon (<2%) causes of
Ischemic CVA
Age
Younger patients account for up to 25% of Vertebral Dissection related
Ischemic CVA
Peak
Incidence
age 50-60 years
Gender
Women are affected at a younger age than men
Pathophysiology
Vertebral Artery Dissection most commonly occurs with compression at one of two foramina
Cervical foramen at C1-2
Transverse foramen at C5-6
Vertebral Artery
media tear (middle muscular, arterial layer) allowing blood intrusion into arterial wall
Resulting intramural thrombus occludes vessel with risk of CVA
Causes
See
Cervical Artery Dissection
Types
Ischemic Vertebral Artery Dissection
Resulting cerebral ischemia or infarction
Many dissections heal spontaneously and occluded vessels may be compensated by opposite
Vertebral Artery
Rupture of Intradural
Vertebral Artery
dissecting aneurysm (hemorrhagic)
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Unstable with high risk of recurrent bleeding (70% of cases, most within first week, and mortality 47%)
Findings
Extracranial Vertebral Artery Dissection (primarily at C1-2)
Occipitocervical region severe pain
Unilateral
Neck Pain
and
Headache
Vertebrobasilar Ischemia or Infarction Symptom
Dizziness
Vertigo
Diplopia
Ataxia
Dysarthria
Vertebrobasilar Infarction
Cerebellar infarction
Spinal Cord Infarction
See
Spinal Cord Syndrome
Wallenberg Syndrome
(lateral
Medulla
ry ischemia)
Dysmetria,
Ataxia
and ipsilateral
Hemiplegia
Intracranial Vertebral Artery Dissection
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
in 50% of cases
High rebleeding rate, poor prognosis, high mortality
Responsible for up to 10% of non-
Traumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
May be minor in some cases
Imaging
MR Angiogram
Has largely replaced CT Angiogram as gold standard, with similar efficacy
CT Angiogram
As with MRA, CT angiogram has high
Test Sensitivity
Prognosis
Extracranial Vertebral Artery Dissection
No deficit 50%
Mild deficit 21%
Moderate to severe deficit 25%
Mortality 4%
Intracranial Vertebral Artery Dissection
Associated with severe neurologic deficits
Management
Anticoagulation
(unless contraindicated, e.g.
Hemorrhage
)
Intravenous
Heparin
, then
Oral
Anticoagulant
Surgical interventions
Endovascular procedures
Vascular or Neurosurgery
References
Hussein and Leiman (2022) Crit Dec Emerg Med 36(8): 4-8
Park (2008) J Korean Neurosurg Soc 44:109-15 [PubMed]
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