Traumatic Carotid Artery Dissection: A Significant Incidental Finding

Author:

Hughes K. Michael1,Collier Bryan2,Greene Karl A.3,Kurek Stanley2

Affiliation:

1. Trauma Services, Department of Surgery, Conemaugh Memorial Medical Center/Temple University, Johnstown, Pennsylvania

2. General Surgery, Department of Surgery, Conemaugh Memorial Medical Center/Temple University, Johnstown, Pennsylvania

3. Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Conemaugh Memorial Medical Center/Temple University, Johnstown, Pennsylvania

Abstract

Blunt traumatic carotid artery dissection remains controversial in terms of diagnostic screening, reported incidence, and management. Treatment options include observation, anticoagulation and endovascular stenting, and aggressive surgical repair of the carotid artery injury. Blunt traumatic carotid artery dissections were reviewed through a retrospective study of trauma registry records. Seven patients were identified from 3342 patients over 3 years. Six patients were identified incidentally during magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) cervical spine/brain screening and one patient during angiographic evaluation for possible penetrating neck injury without MRI/magnetic resonance angiography (MRA). A total of 189 patients underwent MRI screening over this 3-year period, demonstrating a relative incidence of 3.7 per cent, contrasting with the reported incidence of 0.08 to 0.4 per cent for all trauma patients. All seven patients suffered severe head injuries (mean Glasgow Coma Score = 4.7) requiring mean intensive care unit and hospital stays of 15.6 and 23.7 days, respectively. None of the patients showed evidence of stroke with CT scanning on presentation. None of the patients demonstrated clinical focal neurologic signs or symptoms indicating carotid injury or stroke. Six patients survived their acute trauma and were discharged to rehabilitation after initiation of observation (one patient) or anticoagulation (five patients). All six patients showed neurological improvement without deterioration clinically or radiographically. In conclusion we propose early aggressive screening through MRI/MRA of severely injured patients to detect occult carotid artery dissections. Conservative medical treatment for this occult injury has been effective in this series of patients.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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