This site is targeted at medical and radiology professionals, contains user contributed content, and material that may be confusing to a lay audience. Use of this site implies acceptance of our Terms of Use.

Carotid dissection with infarct

Case contributed by: Dr Frank Gaillard

Presentation:

Right sided weakness.

Patient Data:

Age: Young adult
Gender: Female
Race: Caucasian
Modality: CT

Non contrast CT demonstrates patchy low density seen in the white matter of the left cerebral hemisphere, in a deep waterzone distribution.

Modality: CT

CT perfusion demonstrates:

  • Increased MTT (consistent with slow flow)
  • Increased cerebral blood volume in the cortex
  • Decreased cerebral blood flow in the white matter

In other words there is a ischaemic penumbra (mismatch between MTT and CBF) encompassing the cortex, which has vasodilation (thus elevated CBV). 

DSA

Modality: DSA (angiography)

Angiogram confirms diagnosis of left ICA dissection, seen as a tapering lumen which disappears below the base of skull. 

Patient was treated with endovascular stent placement.

MRI - DWI - day 2

Modality: MRI

Diffusion weighted imaging the next day demonstrates only patchy deep border zone restricted diffusion. Little if any cortical infarction is present.

Case Discussion:

This young woman presented with a spontaneous carotid dissection and extensive watershed infarction between underperfused MCA territory on the left and ACA / PCA. The perfusion maps correctly identified an ischaemic penumbra encompassing most of the cortex, which was being supplied by collaterals, encouraged by maximal vasodilatation. 

Carotid stent placement re-established cortical perfusion and saved this patient form a devastating stroke. 

Related articles

Updating… Please wait.
Loadinganimation

 Details successfully updated.

Error Unable to process the form. Check for errors and try again.

 Thank you for updating your details.