Traumatic cervical artery dissections

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General information

  • Cervical arterial dissections are a subset of cervical cerebrovascular injuries as shown below.
  • Cervical cerebrovascular injuries can be due to:
    • Penetrating injury
    • Traumatic dissection: the subject of this chapter
      • Due to blunt trauma
      • Due to stretching: e.g. from neck hyperextension or therapeutic spinal manipulation
      • Iatrogenic: dissection caused by intimal tear from angiography catheters
    • Traumatic compression or occlusion
      • Kinking from malalignment: e.g. with cervical fracture-dislocation
      • Compression by bone fragments: e.g. by fractures through foramen transversarium

Mechanism for dissection

  • Dissections are initiated with a tear on the innermost intimal layer or the media layer of the blood vessel wall → Extravasation of arterial blood under pressure can extend the dissection between intima and tunica media creating luminal narrowing or occlusion → intramural hematoma → luminal stenosis → Reduced distal flow
  • Dissection within the intracranial cavity → aneurysmal dilatation → haemorrhage into subarachnoid space.
  • Rupture of an artery with subsequent encapsulation of the extravascular hematoma may or may not produce luminal narrowing
  • Distal embolization occurs due to
    • Platelet aggregation stimulated by exposed surfaces or dislodged thrombus.