Vertebral artery wall inflammation suspected as the cause of cryptogenic ischemic stroke developing during the recovery period of COVID-19

Author:

Hayashi Satoru1ORCID,Nishimoto Yo1,Yanase Yongran1,Okune Yukiya1,Matsuoka Keita1,Nishimoto Shota1,Hosoda Koji2,Negishi Masatoshi3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Chikamori Hospital, Kochi, Japan

2. Department of Radiology, Chikamori Hospital, Kochi, Japan

3. Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Chikamori Hospital, Kochi, Japan

Abstract

Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) can cause acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to large vessel occlusion (LVO). Some cases of COVID-19-related LVO are known to be resistant to mechanical thrombectomy and have different characteristics from non-COVID-19-related LVO. Inflammation of the occluded arterial wall is suspected as one of the causes of such differences, but the exact mechanism is not fully understood. A 52-year-old man suffered from AIS due to left vertebral artery (VA) occlusion during the recovery period after mild COVID-19. Successful recanalization of the left VA was achieved with antithrombotic therapy, but a late and reversible edematous lesion appeared in part of the brainstem adjacent to the left VA, with abnormal enhancement in both the left VA wall and medulla oblongata on postcontrast magnetic resonance imaging. We suggest that the left VA wall inflammation, induced by COVID-19, caused the ischemic stroke and extended to the brainstem, and an incidental thrombosed unruptured aneurysm of the left VA accelerated these changes. This case provides the first evidence of LVO after COVID-19 in which the pathological conditions in the brainstem adjacent to the affected artery could be observed with neuroimaging and inflammation of the arterial wall was indirectly confirmed. Physicians should be aware that unconventional ischemic stroke may develop in some patients during the recovery period after COVID-19.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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