| Literature DB >> 35740812 |
Dhanalakshmi Angappan1, McKinnon Garrett1, Candice Henry2, Art Riddle1, Jenny L Wilson1.
Abstract
Thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) is a condition that results from the compression of neurovascular structures as they exit the thorax. Arterial ischemic stroke can occur in TOS due to retrograde embolism from the subclavian artery. We describe a 15-year-old girl who presented with left hemiplegia after 2 weeks of right arm numbness and tingling. Imaging showed an acute ischemic stroke due to a right middle cerebral artery occlusion. She was treated with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator at 1.3 h and mechanical thrombectomy at 2.4 h with successful recanalization. Review of her neck computed tomography angiogram suggested a right subclavian artery aneurysm, and upper-extremity imaging also demonstrated distal thrombosis and fusion of right first and second ribs, which was consistent with thoracic outlet syndrome. Three days later, she underwent a right subclavian artery aneurysm repair, right brachial and ulnar artery thrombectomy, and first rib resection. Three months later, she demonstrated good neurologic recovery. TOS is an uncommon cause of stroke in children, which may be heralded by upper-extremity symptoms. Interventionalists should be aware of the possibility of vascular anomalies in children; however, this finding does not exclude the possibility of acute stroke intervention.Entities:
Keywords: endovascular treatment; ischemic stroke; pediatric stroke; thoracic outlet syndrome; thrombectomy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740812 PMCID: PMC9221651 DOI: 10.3390/children9060875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Figure 1Neuroimaging of acute ischemic stroke and treatment. (A,B) Computed tomography angiogram of the head showing hyperdense middle cerebral artery (white arrows; (A) axial, (B) coronal). (C) Reformatted computed tomography angiogram of the head and 3D coronal demonstrating an abrupt cutoff of the right middle cerebral artery (white arrow). (D,E) Conventional cerebral angiogram showing stent retriever deployed across the right middle cerebral artery clot ((D) sagittal image, black circle) and, after successful clot retrieval, showing recanalized middle cerebral artery ((E) black arrow). (F) Non-contrast axial computed tomography of the head 24 h after intravenous tissue plasminogen-activator and thrombectomy showing ischemia limited to the right basal ganglia (loss of right caudate gray-white matter differentiation, white circle) without hemorrhagic conversion.
Figure 2Computed tomography angiography of chest. (A) Right subclavian aneurysm (white circle) with lack of downstream intraluminal contrast compatible with thrombosis, presumed to have embolized to the right carotid artery (big arrow). Vertebral artery is patent (small arrow), coronal view. (B) Maximum intensity projection in bone windows highlighting abnormally fused right first and second ribs (white arrow), coronal view.
Reported cases of pediatric stroke due to thoracic outlet syndrome.
| Study | Age/ | Risk Factors | Preceding Symptoms | Stroke Distribution | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current study | 15 y | Partially fused R 1st and 2nd ribs |
Migraines R arm sensory changes | R MCA |
IV tPA, cerebral thrombectomy Aspirin Rib resection, subclavian bypass, UE thrombectomy | Mild L foot dystonia |
| Aghamiri et al., 2022 [ | 15 y | Heterozygous for plasminogen activator inhibitor and MTHFR |
L arm sensory changes Stroke | R MCA |
Cerebral thrombectomy x2 Aspirin, then long-term anticoagulation R UE thrombectomy | Not reported |
| Kuril et al., 2021 [ | 14 y | Violinist and B cervical ribs |
Migraines R arm sensory and color changes | B posterior circulation |
Anticoagulation and aspirin Fasciotomy, UE thrombectomy Rib resection, subclavian aneurysm repair and bypass | Not reported |
| Strzelecka et al., 2018 [ | 8 y | R cervical rib and R bifid 1strib | None | Posterior circulation |
Anticoagulation Postponed rib excision until end of skeletal growth | R-sided weakness, intention tremor |
| Bains et al., 2014 [ | 12 y | B hypoplastic 1st vs. cervical ribs |
Chest pain Headache L hand cyanosis TIA | Posterior circulation | Rib excision | Mild dyscoordination, arm shakiness |
| Meumann et al., 2013 [ | 16 y | B cervical ribs |
R hand cyanosis R hand sensory changes TIA | R MCA |
Anticoagulation Rib excision | Not reported |
| Kataria et al., 2012 [ | 14 y | R cervical rib | Prior stroke | R MCA (old), posterior circulation (acute) |
Anticoagulant and aspirin Rib excision | Minimal L-sided weakness not impacting function |
| Sharma et al., 2010 [ | 18 y | R cervical rib | none | R MCA | Rib excision | Not reported |
| Lee et al., 2007 [ | 15 y | B cervical ribs | R arm sensory changes | R MCA |
Anticoagulation UE thrombectomy and bypass, rib excision | L arm weakness |
| Blank et al., 1974 [ | 18 y | B cervical ribs | R hand pain | Posterior circulation | None reported | Resolution of neurologic symptoms |
Reported cases of pediatric arterial ischemic stroke due to thoracic outlet syndrome including age and sex, symptoms preceding the acute presentation, stroke distribution, treatment (acute stroke, secondary prevention and treatment of the thoracic outlet syndrome), and patient outcome. B, bilateral; F, female; IV tPA, intravenous tissue plasminogen activator; L, left; M, male; MCA, middle cerebral artery; R, right; TIA, transient ischemic attack; TOS, thoracic outlet syndrome; UE, upper extremity; Y, years.