A searchable database of
medically documented cases

About the Project

Spontaneous Healing Of An Isolated Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery Dissection Without Stroke: A Case Report

Kishi, Y. 2019Other/Unknown

Kishi Y. (2019). Spontaneous healing of an isolated posterior inferior cerebellar artery dissection without stroke: a case report. BMC neurology, 19(1), 124. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-019-1352-0

View Original Source →

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Isolated posterior inferior cerebellar artery dissections can cause subarachnoid hemorrhages or infarctions. Surgical and endovascular treatments for hemorrhagic stroke cases and medical treatments using antithrombotic agents for ischemic stroke cases have been performed, but there are very few reports on nonstroke isolated posterior inferior cerebellar artery dissections, and the treatment strategy for nonstroke cases has not been established. CASE PRESENTATION: A 48-year-old healthy male felt a severe, throbbing headache on the right side and came to our clinic on the fourth day following onset. MRI examinations revealed a right posterior inferior cerebellar artery dissection and showed no infarctions or hemorrhages. He was observed carefully with continuous monitoring of blood pressure, hydrated sufficiently, and given analgesic anti-inflammatory agents. Two weeks later, the dissected vessel's diameter grew to the maximum size, though the patient's headache rapidly improved around that day. Surgical or endovascular treatments for prevention of subarachnoid hemorrhage were recommended, but careful conservative therapy was continued in accordance with the patient's wishes. Gradually, the dissection finding improved. Four months later, MRI examinations showed his right posterior inferior cerebellar artery was almost normal in size and shape. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first detailed report on a nonstroke isolated posterior inferior cerebellar artery dissection that spontaneously occurred and healed, observed by serial high-resolution MRI examinations.

Case Details

Disease Location

Posterior inferior cerebellar artery

Personal Characteristics

48-year-old male

Clinical Characteristics

Sudden, severe, throbbing headache on the right side for 4 days. MRI examinations showed a tiny dissection-like finding (pearl and string sign-like) on his right proximal segment (tonsillomedullar segment) of posterior inferior cerebellar artery (pica) he was given analgesic anti-inflammatory agents

Remission Characteristics

Four weeks after the onset, the dissection finding on mip images began to improve. Eight weeks after the onset, his pica looked almost normal. Four months after the onset, the outer diameter was observed to be almost normal in size and shape

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

None reported

Clinical Treatment

Nsaid

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported