Stroke. 1998;29:2213-2215
(Stroke. 1998;29:2213-2215.)
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Two Chinese Patients With Vertebrobasilar Dolichoectasia
Raymond T.F. Cheung, MBBS, PhD, MRCP;
Windsor Mak, MBBS, MRCP
Division of Neurology,
Department of Medicine,
Queen Mary Hospital,
Hong Kong
To the Editor:
We read with great interest the article, "Posterior Circulation
Infarcts in Patients With Vertebrobasilar Dolichoectasia," by Passero
and Filosomi.1 We would like to make the following comments
and describe 2 Chinese patients with vertebrobasilar dolichoectasia
(VBD) who presented with features of vertebrobasilar stroke. (There is
a minor printing mistake in Table 1 of the article, since 12 patients
instead of 11 had prior transient ischemic attacks.1)
First, the authors suggested the following 2 pathophysiological
mechanisms of infarction in patients with VBD: (1) infarcts in distal
territories (including posterior cerebral artery territory) associated
with artery-to-artery embolism and (2) brain stem/cerebellar infarcts
associated with branch atheromatous disease. Nevertheless, the authors
postulated in the following paragraph that slow flow and distortion
were related to infarcts in the posterior cerebral artery territory and
that infratentorial infarcts were related to distortion and stretching
of the branches of the basilar artery. Finally, the authors also
pointed out the importance of superimposed atheromatous changes in
precipitating ischemia in pateints with VBD. Thus, we remain confused
as to the most likely pathophysiological mechanisms for ischemia
in VBD.
Second, VBD is an uncommon vascular anomaly, but the authors were able
to study 40 consecutive stroke patients with associated VBD and compare
them with another 40 VBD patients without stroke.1 We are
interested in knowing the frequencies of VBD in both stroke patients
and patients without stroke. In addition, we would like to know how the
authors collected the 40 VBD patients without stroke. Was the diagnosis
of VBD made in postmortem examinations? If the VBD was diagnosed by
(CT) or MRI, what were the presenting symptoms and why were
neuroimaging tests indicated?
The Queen Mary Hospital of Hong Kong is a regional hospital serving a
population of one-half million. Stroke patients are routinely assessed
by a member of the Division of Neurology, who collects prospective data
for our stroke database and recommends appropriate management. Our
stroke database has collected information from 358 stroke patients
between January 1997 and May 1998, and ischemic stroke affected 275 of
these patients. Brain stem/cerebellar infarctions occurred in 25
patients. During this period, we have encountered 2 Chinese patients
with VBD. The first was a 73-year-old hypertensive woman who had
postradioiodine hypothyroidism on replacement therapy. She presented
with sudden onset of right-sided weakness and numbness, dysarthria,
dysphagia, and vertigo. Initial examination showed normal
consciousness, horizontal nystagmus, left sixth nerve palsy, dense
right hemiplegia, and right upgoing plantar response. CT of the brain
revealed calcified VBD and possible left pontine infarct. MRI and MR
angiography confirmed VBD with possible dissection, extensive brain
stem infarct, and asymptomatic right middle cerebral artery aneurysmal
dilatation. She was given subcutaneous injections of
low-molecular-weight heparin. Her consciousness deteriorated during the
first few days, but her condition later improved. She survived with
significant neurological deficits.
A 75-year-old woman with history of hypertension and diabetes mellitus
presented with progressive slurring of speech and limb weakness for 10
days. Initial examination revealed dysarthria, left-sided hypertonus,
mild generalized weakness, and ataxia of both arms. CT showed calcified
VBD only. She became confused, with agitation, over the next 2 days and
had 2 episodes of generalized tonic-clonic convulsions on day 3 after
admission. Repeat CT showed no interval change, and treatment with
phenytoin was commenced. Her consciousness deteriorated further, and
she became unresponsive following 2 more episodes of generalized
seizures. Her seizure did not recur after add-on therapy with sodium
valproate. When neurological examination was repeated, we found that
the withdrawal response to noxious stimuli was impaired on her left
side and her gaze was deviated to the left. Thus, our diagnosis was
evolving brain stem infarction related to her VBD. MRI of her brain was
performed 3 weeks later. Although the VBD was confirmed, MRI did not
show any infarction in her brain. Follow-up EEG revealed periodic, 1-Hz
generalized sharp waves typical of Creutzfeldt-Jakob encephalopathy.
Her cerebrospinal fluid was normal. She was subsequently sent to a
convalescent hospital for long-term care. These 2 cases illustrate the
fact that stroke associated with VBD is uncommon (1 in 25 patients with
brain stem/cerebellar infarcts) in Chinese and that VBD or other
aneurysmal arterial dilatation may be an incidental finding unrelated
to the neurological symptoms.
References
-
Passero S, Filosomi G. Posterior
circulation infarcts in patients with vertebrobasilar dolichoectasia.
Stroke. 1998;29:653659.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Response
Stefano Passero, MD
Istituto di Clinica delle Malattie Nervose e Mentali,
Università di Siena,
Siena, Italy
We thank Drs Cheung and Mak for their interest in our article,
and we regret the printing error in Table 1. It is impossible to name
the "most likely pathophysiological mechanisms for ischemia in
VBD." Several mechanism may be involved, and every patient has
different features related to the degree of ectasia, vertical
elongation, and lateral displacement of the basilar artery and to the
presence of atheromatous changes of the posterior circulation. Common
mechanisms (arteriolar lipohyalinosis, obstruction by atheroma or
intraluminal thrombus, and artery-to-artery embolism) may be operating,
and some have been regarded as being responsible for ischemia
associated with VBD.1 2 3 4 5 6 Our patients may be classified
according to classic criteria and assigned to one of these mechanisms.
Because in VBD other specific mechanisms such as distortion of branches
of the basilar artery (BA) and hemodynamic factors may contribute to
ischemia,5 7 we analyzed some aspects of the BA (degree of
ectasia, vertical elongation, and lateral displacement). The results of
this analysis showed that location of infarcts was linked to some
characteristics of the BA, which suggests certain pathophysiological
mechanisms (reduced blood flow velocity and possible distortion of the
posterior cerebral arteries and their small branches, and distortion
and/or stretching of the branches of the BA).
The importance of superimposed atheromatous changes in precipitating
ischemia in patients with VBD emerges from a comparison of VBD patients
with and without stroke. Ischemic complications of VBD were more often
observed in patients who had superimposed atheromatous changes of the
posterior circulation.
In conclusion, (1) the presence of atheromatous changes of the
posterior circulation, with its consequences (artery-to-artery
embolism, branch atheromatous disease) is an important factor for
ischemic complications in VBD patients but not a necessary condition,
since some patients with stroke had no atheromatous changes; and (2)
pathophysiological mechanisms closely linked to the characteristics of
the BA operate in VBD patients with ischemic complications together
with any atheromatous changes.
VBD is regarded as "uncommon" and often asymptomatic, and many
papers on the topic, including mine,8 9 open with this
premise. Actually, the true incidence of VBD and the frequency with
which this vascular anomaly becomes symptomatic are still uncertain.
Being infrequent, the means used to detect it and the type of patients
investigated are important. The most suitable means are undoubtedly MRI
and MR angiography. In our experience and that of others,10
CT scan may not be sufficient. With regard to the type of patient, if
we look for VBD in populations at risk (ie, patients with
vertebrobasilar ischemia, hemifacial spasm, cranial nerve syndromes,
auditory-vestibular symptoms, and trigeminal neuralgia), we have a
greater probability of finding patients with this anomaly. We recently
found a close association between VBD and idiopathic bilateral
vestibular loss.11 On this point the literature is clear:
in studies of patients who underwent cerebral angiography, the
incidence of VBD ranged from 0.17% to 5.8%1214; in
selected series of patients, the rates of VBD were 2% to 7% in
patients with trigeminal neuralgia,15 16 4.8% in patients
with cranial nerve syndromes,17 2.5% in patients with
lateral medullary18 or thalamic19 infarcts,
2.8% in patients with pontine infarcts,20 3.3% in
patients with cerebellar infarcts,21 7.1% in patients with
lower brain stem infarcts,22 12.5% to 14.3% in patients
with vertebrobasilar infarcts,23 24 26.7% in patients with
vertigo and slowing of vertebrobasilar flow,25 and 78.3%
in patients with hemifacial spasm.26
We began gathering our population in 1980 in collaboration with the
Institutes of Radiology, Otolaryngology and Neurosurgery. We created a
type of VBD register for the pupose of studying clinical and imaging
data and, in particular, follow-up. Our register now includes 124
patients who on the basis of clinical presentation may be grouped as
follows: 47 with acute cerebrovascular ischemic events (transient
ischemic attack or stroke), 17 with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), 39
with cranial nerve syndromes and/or auditory-vestibular symptoms, 2
with hydrocephalus, and 19 with incidental VBD. It is difficult to
evaluate the epidemiology; however, patients with cerebrovascular
ischemic events belong to a series of approximately 6300 patients
hospitalized for acute cerebrovascular ischemic disease; those with ICH
belong to a series of 1005 patients with ICH; and patients with other
types of presentation were among those hospitalized in our institute or
in the Institute of Otolaryngology and those seen in the respective
outpatient clinics. For patients with cerebral ischemic or hemorrhagic
events, the incidence of VBD (0.75% and 1.7%, respectively) can be
calculated since all did at least CT scan. It cannot be calculated for
other patients because not all of them did imaging studies.
As clearly stated in our article, all patients were diagnosed by CT
scan, cerebral angiography, or MRI studies, and not by autopsy. Of our
40 VBD patients without stroke, 14 had impairment of one or more
cranial nerves, associated in 8 with auditory-vestibular symptoms; 11
had vestibular symptoms (imbalance, vertigo, oscillopsia); 2 had
auditory symptoms (tinnitus and hearing loss); 3 had combined auditory
and vestibular symptoms; and 10 had symptoms unrelated to the VBD.
Patients with cranial nerve impairment had involvement of the facial
nerve (paresis with nuclear/peripheral pattern or hemifacial spasm;
n=5), trigeminal nerve (neuralgia or sensory disturbances with
peripheral pattern; n=4), or both (n=5). Additional cranial nerves were
involved in 3 cases. In patients with cranial nerve syndromes or with
auditory-vestibular symptoms, the need for imaging is evident and
requires no further comment.
Drs Cheung and Mak found 1 case of VBD among 25 patients with brain
stem/cerebellar infarcts (4%) or 2 cases among 275 stroke or presumed
stroke patients (0.72%). These percentages are in line with the above,
and it may be premature to suggest that VBD is rarer in Chinese
patients. It is incidental and well known that VBD may be asymptomatic
or unrelated to the neurological symptoms.11 13 15 27
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