Vertebral artery dissection, particularly as it passes through the transverse foramina.
b. Clinical features
Internal carotid dissection
Vertebral artery dissection
Unilateral headache, usually frontotemporal and severe enough to mimic SAH or migraine.
Headache, typically occipital.
Anterior neck pain.
Posterior neck pain.
Partial Horner syndrome, with miosis and ptosis.
Facial paraesthesia.
Cranial nerve palsies.
Lateral medullary syndrome, diplopia, or ataxia.
c. Screening
Denver screening criteria, divided into risk factors and signs/symptoms.
d. Risk factors
Neck trauma, including cervical spine fractures involving the transverse foramen, cervical spine subluxation, severe facial injury, or base-of-skull fracture involving the carotid canal.
Cervical manipulation.
Connective tissue disease.
Near hanging with anoxic brain injury.
e. Suggestive signs or symptoms
Focal neurological deficit.
Cervical bruit or thrill.
Infarct on head CT.
Expanding neck haematoma.
Neurological examination inconsistent with the head CT findings.
Comments are closed for this SAQ.