Radiology Case Reports (May 2023)

Bilateral vertebral artery dissection extending to the left posterior cerebral artery: A case report

  • Masahiro Morishita, MD,
  • Koichiro Shindo, MD,
  • Ryunosuke Yoshihara, MD,
  • Kohei Ishikawa, MD,
  • Ryota Nomura, MD,
  • Hideki Endo, MD, PhD,
  • Koji Oka, MD,
  • Hirohiko Nakamura, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 5
pp. 1686 – 1690

Abstract

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Intracranial artery dissection accounts for a small percentage (1%-2%) of all ischemic strokes. Vertebral artery dissection sometimes extends to the basilar artery but very rarely to the posterior cerebral artery. We report a case of bilateral vertebral artery dissection extending to the left posterior cerebral artery with the characteristic distribution of intramural hematoma. A 51-year-old woman presented with right hemiparesis and dysarthria 3 days after sudden neck pain. Magnetic resonance imaging on admission revealed infarcts in the left thalamus and temporo-occipital lobe and findings suggestive of bilateral vertebral artery dissection. No infarct was detected in the brainstem. The patient was treated conservatively. Initially, we suspected that infarction in the left posterior cerebral artery territory had been caused by artery-to-artery embolism from the dissected vertebral arteries. However, T1-weighted imaging on day 15 of admission revealed intramural hematoma extending from the left vertebral artery to the left posterior cerebral artery. Therefore, we diagnosed bilateral vertebral artery dissection extending to the basilar artery and the left posterior cerebral artery. The patient's symptoms subsequently improved with conservative treatment, and she was discharged with a modified Rankin Scale score of 1 on day 62 of admission. In this case, intramural hematoma of the basilar artery was found in the anterior vessel wall. Brainstem infarction is less likely when intramural hematoma is located in the anterior vessel wall of the basilar artery in vertebrobasilar artery dissection. T1-weighted imaging is useful for the diagnosis of this rare condition and can predict potentially impaired branches and possible symptoms.

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