| Literature DB >> 29681825 |
Tatsuya Ueno1, Tatsuya Sasaki2, Masatoshi Iwamura3, Tomoya Kon1, Jin-Ichi Nunomura1, Hiroshi Midorikawa3, Masahiko Tomiyama1.
Abstract
An 83-year-old Japanese man was admitted with dysarthria and right hemiparesis. He had had a large intracranial aneurysm on the left internal carotid artery 5 years before admission and had been followed up under conservative treatment. On admission, diffusion-weighted imaging revealed a hyperintense signal on the left anterior choroidal artery territory. Time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography demonstrated poor visibility of the middle and anterior cerebral arteries and the inferior giant aneurysm, suggesting distal emboli from aneurysm thrombosis or a reduction of blood outflow due to aneurysm thrombosis. Arterial spin labeling (ASL) signal increased in the giant aneurysm, suggesting blood stagnation within the aneurysmal sac, and decreased in the left hemisphere. We diagnosed cerebral infarction due to aneurysm thrombosis, and started antithrombotic therapy. On day 2, he suddenly died of subarachnoid hemorrhage due to rupturing of the giant aneurysm. When thrombosis occurs in a giant aneurysm, increasing ASL signal within the aneurysm and decreasing ASL signal with poor visibility on magnetic resonance angiography in the same arterial territory may indicate the danger of impending rupture of the giant aneurysm.Entities:
Keywords: Arterial spin labeling; Cerebral infarction; Giant aneurysm; Impending rupture; Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Year: 2018 PMID: 29681825 PMCID: PMC5903132 DOI: 10.1159/000487587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Neurol ISSN: 1662-680X
Fig. 1Digital subtraction angiography (a) obtained 5 years before admission. Magnetic resonance imaging (b–f) obtained on admission. a Left carotid angiography displays a large intracranial aneurysm (arrowhead; maximum diameter 21 mm) on the left internal carotid artery. b Diffusion-weighted imaging reveals a hyperintense signal on the left anterior choroidal artery territory (arrowhead). c–e Time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography demonstrated poor visibility of the middle and anterior cerebral arteries and the inferior part of the giant aneurysm (maximum diameter 28 mm), suggesting aneurysm thrombosis (arrowheads).
Fig. 2Arterial spin labeling obtained on admission. Arterial spin labeling signals increased in the giant aneurysm (arrowheads) and decreased in the left hemisphere.