| Literature DB >> 18756072 |
Joon Cho1, Chang Taek Moon, Hyun Seung Kang, Woo Jin Choe, Sang Keun Chang, Young Cho Koh, Hong Gee Roh.
Abstract
Vertebrobasilar junction entrapment due to a clivus fracture is a rare clinical observation. The present case report describes a 54-yr-old man who sustained a major craniofacial injury. The patient displayed a stuporous mental state (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS]=8) and left hemiparesis (Grade 3). The initial computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a right subdural hemorrhage in the frontotemporal region, with a midline shift and longitudinal clival fracture. A decompressive craniectomy with removal of the hematoma was performed. Two days after surgery, a follow-up CT scan showed cerebellar and brain stem infarction, and a CT angiogram revealed occlusion of the left vertebral artery and entrapment of vertebrobasilar junction by the clival fracture. A decompressive suboccipital craniectomy was performed and the patient gradually recovered. This appears to be a rare case of traumatic vertebrobasilar junction entrapment due to a longitudinal clival fracture, including a cerebellar infarction caused by a left vertebral artery occlusion. A literature review is provided.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18756072 PMCID: PMC2526400 DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2008.23.4.747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Med Sci ISSN: 1011-8934 Impact factor: 2.153
Fig. 1Initial CT scan showing a longitudinal clivus fracture extending from the frontal basal skull fracture (A), and an acute subdural hemorrhage with a partial midline shift in the right frontotemporal region (B).
Fig. 2Follow-up CT scan showing a left cerebellar and brain stem infarction.
Fig. 3CT angiogram (A) and its source images (B). White arrows indicate the right vertebral artery (a), entrapped vertebrobasilar junction (b, c) and basilar artery (d, e).
Fig. 4Transfemoral conventional left vertebral angiogram anteroposterior (A) and lateral (B) views. Arrows show the vertebral artery obstruction in the cervical region.
Fig. 5Post-surgical CT scan showing the decompressive suboccipital craniectomy state.
Reported cases of vertebrobasilar artery trapping in a longitudinal clivus fracture
VA, vertebral angiogram; ND, not described; GCS, Glasgow coma scale.