Stroke. 2005;36:e45-e47
Published online before print March 3, 2005,
doi: 10.1161/01.STR.0000158910.08024.7f
(Stroke. 2005;36:e45.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Endovascular Stent-Assisted Angioplasty in the Management of Traumatic Internal Carotid Artery Dissections
José E. Cohen, MD;
Tamir Ben-Hur, MD, PhD;
Gustavo Rajz, MD;
Felix Umansky, MD
John M. Gomori
From the Departments of Neurosurgery (J.E.C., F.U.), Division of Neuroendovascular Surgery and Interventional Neuroradiology (J.E.C., M.G.), and Neurology (T.B.H.), Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.
Correspondence to José E. Cohen, MD, Department of Neurosurgery, Hadassah University Medical Center, Ein-Kerem, P.O. Box 12,000, Jerusalem 91120, Israel. E-mail jcohenns{at}yahoo.com
 |
Abstract
|
|---|
Background and Purpose The prognosis of traumatic dissection
of the internal carotid artery is worse than for spontaneous
dissections. Rapid stenting followed by antiplatelet therapy
may prevent complications when anticoagulation therapy is not
applicable.
Methods Patients with angiographically proven traumatic carotid artery dissection and hemodynamic significant hemispheric hypoperfusion, or in whom anticoagulant therapy was either contraindicated or failed clinically, were regarded as being at high risk for stroke and were selected for stenting.
Results Ten patients with traumatic dissection underwent stenting. Endovascular treatment reduced mean dissection stenosis from 69% to 8%. During a mean clinical follow-up time of 16 months, none had additional transient ischemic attacks or stroke. Doppler ultrasound studies did not detect any signs of de novo in-stent stenosis.
Conclusion In selected cases of traumatic carotid artery dissections, endovascular stent-assisted angioplasty immediately restored the integrity of the vessel lumen and prevented efficiently the occurrence of new ischemic events, without additional anticoagulation.
Key Words: carotid arteries stents stroke, ischemic trauma
 |
Introduction
|
|---|
Traumatic dissection of the internal carotid artery is an uncommon
but well-recognized entity.
1,2 In the clinical set-up of neurotrauma
it is easily missed because of multiple factors contributing
to the neurological deficit. The delayed appearance of focal
neurological signs, unexplained by blood collection, or the
evolution of ischemic changes on brain imaging should raise
the suspicion of dissection. In cases of spontaneous dissection,
anticoagulant treatment is commonly used to prevent thromboembolic
strokes. However, anticoagulation may be contraindicated in
patients with multiple trauma, intracranial hematomas, and penetrating
injuries. Also, 40% of traumatic dissections and the majority
of pseudoaneurysms do not heal with anticoagulant therapy and
constitute a long-term risk of embolization or flow-related
complications.
34
Stenting of carotid arteries by an endovascular approach may provide immediate revascularization and avoids the need of anticoagulation.56 A major issue remains on the selection of patients who will benefit most from this procedure. We report our protocol for patient selection for endovascular stenting in the treatment of 10 patients presenting with traumatic carotid artery dissections.
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
All head trauma patients underwent routine noncontrast brain
computed tomography. Patients with neurological signs or radiological
evidence of injury or with penetrating injury were hospitalized.
Cervical and cerebral angiography was performed after appearance
of: (1) focal neurological signs that were not explained by
the immediate impact or by an intracranial hemorrhage; (2) Horner
syndrome or lower cranial neuropathy; and (3) in all patients
with penetrating neck injuries. The criteria for placement of
stent were: (1) clinical failure of anticoagulation (repetitive
transient ischemic attacks, fluctuating neurological signs,
or neurological deterioration despite anticoagulation; (2) contraindication
for anticoagulation, because of traumatic intracranial or systemic
hemorrhagic lesions; and (3) impending stroke, caused by hemodynamically
significant dissection with parenchymal hypoperfusion, indicated
by lack of parenchymal "blushing" during the capillary phase
of angiography, or in the presence of perfusion/diffusion mismatch
on magnetic resonance imaging.
Patients with a large infarction on computed tomography (>50% middle cerebral artery territory), large defect on diffusion-weighted imaging (>50% middle cerebral artery territory), or patients with longstanding (>2 weeks) established severe neurologic deficit were excluded from this study. Patients with concomitant vertebral artery dissection, iatrogenic or intracranial dissection, or with contraindication for anti-aggregation therapy were excluded as well.
All patients were kept on aspirin (325 mg/d) and clopidogrel (75 mg/d) for 3 months. Neurologic and neuroradiologic examinations were performed at discharge, 1 month, and 6 months. Evaluation of stent patency was assessed by Doppler ultrasound.
 |
Results
|
|---|
During 2.5 years, 10 out of 205 patients (4.9%) admitted after
head and neck injuries were prospectively selected for endovascular
stent-assisted arterial reconstruction. There were 8 men and
2 women (mean age 42.7±13.8 years; range, 17 to 62).
Six patients had multiple traumas, and 4 had cranio-cervical
trauma. Five patients had major brain trauma. The dissection
presented clinically with ischemic stroke in 4 patients, repetitive
transient ischemic attacks in 2, local symptoms in 2 (carotidynia,
Horner syndrome), and 2 patients were screened because of cervico-cranial
penetrating injuries. The clinical manifestations of dissection
appeared 4 hours to 19 days (mean, 4.52 days) after the acute
injury. Stenting was performed because of parenchymal hypoperfusion
and impending stroke (5 patients), neurologic deterioration
under anticoagulation (2 patients), and because of contraindication
for anticoagulation (6 patients). The interval between the onset
of focal ischemic signs and stenting ranged from 2 to 10 hours
(mean, 6.1±4.7 hours). Twenty-two stents were implanted
(7 patients with multiple stents). Dissection-related stenoses
improved from 69±31% (range, 10% to 100%) to 8±9%
(range, 0% to 20%). There were no procedure-related complications.
Six patients improved and 4 remained stable after 16 months
of follow-up (range, 8 to 28 months). There was no evidence
of in-stent de novo stenoses or stent thrombosis by sonographic
follow-up at 7 to 28 months after trauma. No patient had to
discontinue antiplatelet therapy because of side effects.
Three illustrative cases represent the typical circumstances for stenting in traumatic dissections: 1 patient with symptomatic subocclusive carotid dissection complicated by intracranial emboli (Figure A and B); 1 patient with recurrent transient ischemic attacks under anticoagulation (Figure C and D); and 1 patient with multiple emboli secondary to carotid dissection and contraindication for anticoagulation (Figure E to G).

View larger version (159K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
A 58-year-old man had left hemiparesis and dysarthria 2 days after neurotrauma. Digital subtraction angiography revealed subocclusive tapering of the right ICA to a string sign (A) and no collateral blood supply. Cerebral perfusion was restored and hemiparesis improved rapidly after Wallstent deployment (B). A 33-year-old man had right Horner syndrome caused by traumatic segmental dissection with moderate stenosis, intimal flap, and associated pseudoaneurysm. He returned after 46 days because of multiple episodes of hemiparesthesia and arm weakness despite full anticoagulation. Follow-up angiogram showed persistence of the intimal flap and progression of the pseudoaneurysm with endoluminal contrast stagnation (C). A Wallstent was implanted at the level of dissection, covering the pseudoaneurysm orifice (D), without recurrence of clinical episodes. A 17-year-old woman had left hemiparesis 3 days after admitted in coma caused by multiple trauma and diffuse basal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Angiography showed intimal dissection at the mid-cervical right ICA, causing minimal luminal stenosis (E), and embolic occlusion of the angular branch of the right MCA with focal hypoperfusion (F) (*indicates hypoperfused areas). Because anticoagulation was contraindicated, a single Wallstent was deployed at the injured segment, reconstituting the normal carotid lumen (G). The patient underwent successful rehabilitation.
|
|
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
Multiple mechanisms of neural injury act in concert in the traumatized
brain, including axonal shearing, hemorrhages, and increased
intracranial pressure. Consequently, the traumatized brain is
especially vulnerable to ischemia after emboli or hemodynamic
compromise. Moreover, the lack of collateral blood supply after
acute occlusions, as compared with patients with longstanding
atherosclerotic stenosis
7 and the loss of vascular autoregulation
in the injured brain, reduces its ability to compensate for
hypoperfusion. Thus, although spontaneous carotid dissection
is considered relatively benign, the mortality rate and severity
of neurologic deficit are high in traumatic dissections,
2,8,9 as in abrupt internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusion.
10 Anticoagulation
is usually practiced in dissections to prevent thromboembolism.
11 Because patients with multiple trauma and penetrating injuries
frequently have associated hematomas or are at high risk for
bleeding, anticoagulation may be contraindicated. Therefore,
we obtained revascularization by stenting when there was clinical
and/or radiographic indication for impending stroke, or in stroke
in-evolution. The identification of thromboembolic occlusion
of cerebral vessels and of hemodynamically significant reduced
perfusion on the angiographic capillary phase (or by perfusion/diffusion
mismatch on magnetic resonance imaging) provided the rational
for selecting patients that would benefit from stenting. There
were no complications related to the procedures and the clinical
outcome was favorable.
In conclusion, endovascular stenting seems to be a rationale and effective way to restore the artery lumen in selected cases of acute traumatic carotid dissections.
Received November 7, 2004;
revision received December 20, 2004;
accepted January 3, 2005.
 |
References
|
|---|
- Davis JW, Holbrook TL, Hoyt DB, Mackersie RC, Field TO Jr, Shackford SR. Blunt carotid artery dissection: incidence, associated injuries, screening and treatment. J Trauma. 1990; 30: 15141517.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Watridge CB, Muhlbauer MS, Lowery RD. Traumatic carotid artery dissection: diagnosis and treatment. J Neurosurg. 1989; 71: 854857.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Fabian TC, Patton JH, Jr, Croce MA, Minard G, Kudsk KA, Pritchard FE. Blunt carotid injury. Importance of early diagnosis and anticoagulant therapy. Ann Surg. 1996; 223: 513525.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Duke BJ, Ryu RK, Coldwell DM, Brega KE. Treatment of blunt injury to the carotid artery by using endovascular stents: an early experience. J Neurosurg. 1997; 87: 825829.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Malek AM, Higashida RT, Phatouros CC, Lempert TE, Meyers PM, Smith WS, Dowd CF, Halbach VV. Endovascular management of extracranial carotid artery dissection achieved using stent angioplasty. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2000; 21: 12801282.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Bejjani GK, Monsein LH, Laird JR, Satler LF, Starnes BW, Ausili EF. Treatment of symptomatic cervical carotid dissections with endovascular stents. Neurosurgery. 1999; 44: 755761.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Milhaud D, de Freitas G, van Melle G, Bogousslavsky J. Occlusion due to carotid artery dissection. Arch Neurol. 2002; 59: 557561.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Cogbill TH, Moore EE, Meissner M, Fischer RP, Hoyt DB, Morris JA, Shackford SR, Wallace JR, Ross SE, Ochsner MG. The spectrum of blunt injury to the carotid artery: a multicenter perspective. J Trauma. 1994; 37: 473479.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Server A, Dullerud R, Haakonsen M, Nakstad PH, Johnsen UL, Magnaes B. Post-traumatic cerebral infarction. Neuroimaging findings, etiology and outcome. Acta Radiol. 2001; 42: 254260.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
- Linskey ME, Jungreis CA, Yonas H, Hirsch WL, Sekhar LN, Horton JA. Stroke risk after abrupt internal carotid artery sacrifice: accuracy of preoperative assessment with balloon test occlusion and stable xenon-enhanced CT. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 1994; 15: 829843.[Abstract]
- Lucas C, Moulin T, Deplanque D, Tatu L, Chavot D, and the DONALD Investigators. Stroke patterns of internal carotid artery dissection in 40 patients. Stroke. 1998; 29: 26462648.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
B. W. Starnes and Z. M. Arthurs
Endovascular Management of Vascular Trauma
Perspectives in Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy,
June 1, 2006;
18(2):
114 - 129.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Biondi, J. M. Katz, J. Vallabh, A. Z. Segal, and Y. P. Gobin
Progressive Symptomatic Carotid Dissection Treated With Multiple Stents
Stroke,
September 1, 2005;
36(9):
e80 - e82.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|