| Literature DB >> 29465576 |
Yinze Diao1, Yu Sun, Shaobo Wang, Fengshan Zhang, Shengfa Pan, Zhongjun Liu.
Abstract
RATIONALE: The typical intraoperative presentation of vertebral artery injury (VAI) usually involves profuse bleeding and requires immediate treatment. However, an occult VAI may occur intraoperatively and result in delayed life-threatening epidural pseudoaneurysm several days postoperatively. PATIENT CONCERNS: A 21-year-old man with compressive cervical myelopathy resulting from canal stenosis of skeletal fluorosis underwent decompression of C1 to C7 and instrumentation from C2 to C7. No impressive bleeding event occurred during the operation. On postoperative day 40, progressive quadriplegia developed. DIAGNOSES: Pseudoaneurysm of the VA was established by angiography.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29465576 PMCID: PMC5842004 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000009883
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Figure 1Preoperative CT and MRI of the cervical spine. (A) Preoperative CT demonstrated significant hypertrophy of bone and canal stenosis. (B) Preoperative MRI demonstrated cervical cord compression.
Figure 2Cervical MRI and angiography on postoperative day 40. (A) MRI examination demonstrated a large epidural hematoma and extensive spinal cord compression. (B) The bleeding point was located at the right V3 segment in the VA groove of the atlas.
Figure 3Continuous CT scans at the level of the atlas posterior arch. (A) The medial bone of the right VA groove was ground, whereas the left was preserved. (B–D) The bone groove ground during resection of the posterior ring was V-shaped, and the shallow grinding width was much larger than that deeper in the bone. VA = vertebral artery.