Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases and Innovative Techniques (Dec 2022)

Spontaneous carotid blowout of the common carotid artery in a chronically immunosuppressed transplant patient

  • Ali Hakimi, BS,
  • Christina Stuart, MD,
  • Devin Zarkowsky, MD,
  • Michael R. Clay, MD,
  • Jeniann Yi, MD, MSCS

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 715 – 718

Abstract

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Carotid blowout (CB) is a life-threatening surgical emergency with a mortality rate of up to 60%. CB is commonly seen in head and neck cancer patients after surgical and radiation therapy; other causes include iatrogenic, traumatic, or infectious etiologies. We report an unusual case of spontaneous CB presumed to be caused by cytomegalovirus (CMV) in a chronically immunosuppressed transplant recipient. Given the significant mortality of CB and the prevalence of post-transplant CMV, this case highlights an area of further investigation regarding the association between CMV and carotid pathology, as well as the need to include CB as a potential infectious complication in the immunosuppressed population.

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