AI Article Synopsis

  • Cervical carotid dissection, particularly of the common carotid artery (CCAD), is a rare but significant cause of ischemic strokes in younger individuals, accounting for 20-25% of such strokes.
  • A unique case of a 67-year-old patient with burning pain and migraines led to the diagnosis of CCAD through Doppler ultrasound and aortic arch arteriography, prompting surgical intervention.
  • Successful surgery resulted in no post-operative issues, highlighting the need for further research on treatment guidelines for CCAD, as current methods are not well-established.

Article Abstract

Background: Cervical carotid dissection is more common in extracranical vessel: internal carotid artery dissection (ICAD) is typical, vertebral artery dissection is uncommon, common carotid artery dissection (CCAD) is rare and even a more rare cause of ischemic stroke. Cervical artery dissections account up to 20-25% of ischemic strokes in young patients. Isolated and spontaneous common carotid artery dissection without aortic damage is unique. Indeed in the Literature 8 cases were identified. MRI and CTA were the most commonly used for diagnosis and follow-up.

Case Report: A 67-year-old came to our observation reporting burning pain in the right latero-cervical region in supine position, irradiated in the temporal region and recurrent episodes of migraine with aura (scintillating scotoma), in the last 3 months. The last Doppler Ultrasound control, performed after the onset of symptoms, showed an highlighted dissection wall with double lumen at the origin of the bulb and the internal carotid artery on the right. Aortic arch arteriography confirmed the diagnosis. The patient underwent surgery (longitudinal arteriotomy, removing four miointimal flaps, fastening the distal common carotid artery with 3 Kunlin's points).

Results: Any neurological or vascular problems after surgery were noticed.

Discussion And Comments: The pathogenesis can be related to a combination of an intrinsic weakness in the arterial wall and an external trigger. The diagnosis of CAD is made with MRI (78.0%), conventional angiography (31.1%), CTA (14.7%), and ultrasound (11.3%).

Conclusion: No evidence-based guidelines exists for treatment of CCAD. In our patient surgical CEA treatment was the optimal solution.

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