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Fracture of a Flow Diverter in the Cervical Internal Carotid Artery Due to Eagle Syndrome

Johannes Pfaff, Friedrich Weymayr, Monika Killer‐Oberpfalzer

2023Neurointervention13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In Eagle syndrome, elongated styloid processes may provoke internal carotid dissection and pseudoaneurysm causing stroke and data regarding possible complications or long-term results of pseudoaneurysm treatment using a flow diverter are limited. We report a case of a dissection-related pseudoaneurysm in the left cervical carotid artery treated by implantation of a flow diverter. Follow-up imaging of the flow diverter showed fracture of a continuous radiopaque marker at 3 months and fracture of a second continuous radiopaque marker at 7 months, while contrasting of the vessel was preserved. At the time of angiographic control (8 months after implantation), the flow diverter and the extracranial left internal carotid artery were occluded, and the patient did not experience any symptoms throughout the period.

Topics & Concepts

PseudoaneurysmInternal carotid arteryMedicineFlow diverterDissection (medical)Carotid arteriesRadiologyExternal carotid arterySurgeryAneurysmOropharyngeal Anatomy and Pathologies
Fracture of a Flow Diverter in the Cervical Internal Carotid Artery Due to Eagle Syndrome | Litcius