| Literature DB >> 34926061 |
Justin M George1, Peter V Cooke1, Nicole Ilonzo2, Rami O Tadros1, Robert J Grossi1.
Abstract
Innominate artery occlusion is a rare entity, particularly when coupled with severe left common carotid artery stenosis. Innominate artery disease may present with varying degrees of symptomatology and can place patients at risk for both posterior fossa and hemispheric ischemic events. We present a symptomatic case of innominate artery occlusion with severe left common carotid disease. We reviewed the literature and current options for the treatment of innominate artery disease. The patient underwent successful hybrid repair with left carotid artery retrograde stenting and left carotid artery to right carotid artery bypass. She has been symptom and re-intervention free during her one-year follow-up. We describe a successful hybrid repair of symptomatic innominate artery occlusion with concomitant severe left carotid artery stenosis in a patient with a prohibitive open thoracic surgical risk.Entities:
Keywords: carotid-carotid bypass; innominate; subclavian steal syndrome; supra-aortic trunk; vertebrobasilar insufficiency
Year: 2021 PMID: 34926061 PMCID: PMC8671066 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.19592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Preoperative duplex of the right common carotid artery (A), left common carotid artery (B), and right vertebral artery (C). Note the persistent retrograde flow in the right vertebral artery throughout the cardiac cycle.
Figure 2Preoperative right transradial angiogram demonstrating innominate occlusion with filling of the right subclavian (black arrow) and the right common carotid (white arrow) arteries.
Figure 3Arch aortogram demonstrating complete occlusion of the innominate artery (black arrow) with delayed filling and severe stenosis of the left common carotid artery (white arrow).
Figure 4Completion carotid angiogram after stenting demonstrating resolution of the left carotid stenosis. The sheath is within the left common carotid artery in a retrograde fashion after carotid cutdown.
Figure 5Follow-up duplex imaging shows a patent left carotid to right carotid artery bypass graft (A) and oscillation of flow in the right vertebral artery (B).