List clinical features of the dissection of the carotid artery.
Non-ischemic features
Ipsilateral headache and facial/neck pain (constant, severe, throbbing or sharp)
Partial horner syndrome: ptosis and miosis
Pulse-synchronous tinnitus
Neck swelling
Reduced taste sensation
Cranial nerve lesions, usually caudal nerves (VI–XII)
Ischemic features
Symptomatic middle cerebral artery infarction (see “Stroke”)
Amaurosis fugax (ischemic retina)
List clinical features of the dissection of the vertebral artery.
Occipital headache
Posterior nuchal pain
Ischemic features: vertebrobasilar insufficiency (leads to stroke resembling lateral medullary dysfunction, e.g., Wallenberg syndrome)
Ipsilateral loss of taste and facial pain and numbness (most common symptom)
Contralateral pain relief and reduced temperature sensation
Vertigo
Ataxia
Central Horner syndrome
Dysphagia and dysarthria or hoarseness
Nausea, vomiting
List diagnostics.
Duplex ultrasonography: high resistance flow or complete absence of flow in affected artery
Helical CT angiography (replacing MRI as diagnostic modality of choice )
Changed caliber of vessel
Oval or slit-like cross-section of vessel
MR angiography
Intramural blood
Mural expansion
Irregular vessel margins
Filling defects [4]
Extravasation of contrast [5]
Caliber changes of vessel
Conventional angiography
Intimal flap
Double lumen
Long tapered segment of contrast in distal portion of internal carotid artery
Baseline monitoring parameters (e.g., INR, PT, aPPT) should be performed before administering anticoagulant therapy.
Describe the treatment.
Treatment should be initiated after an intracerebral hemorrhage has been ruled out.
Heparin therapy followed by oral anticoagulation for 3–6 months and/or
Antiplatelet agents for 1 year
Possibly angioplasty/stenting or surgical intervention may be warranted in severe cases
Asymptomatic pseudoaneurysms do not usually require treatment and most dissections heal spontaneously.
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