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AJNR Awards, New Junior Editors, and more. Read the latest AJNR updates

Blunt Cerebrovascular Injury – Denver Grade III (Pseudoaneurysm)

Background:

  • Blunt cerebrovascular injury (BCVI) is detected in 1.2–3% of trauma admissions.
    • Highly associated with spinal fractures: up to 8% of C1–C3 fractures; up to 2% of C4–C7 fractures
    • Multiple types of injury: minimal intimal injury, dissection with raised flap or intimal thrombus, intramural hematoma, pseudoaneurysm, occlusion, transection, and AVF formation
    • Can occur in the setting of seemingly mild trauma (as in this case, intense coughing and skiing)
  • Pseudoaneurysm can be contained by adventitia or perivascular tissues.

Clinical Presentation:

  • Highly variable clinical findings:
    • Focal neurologic deficit, Horner syndrome, hematoma or hemorrhage, cervical bruit
    • Neurologic symptoms incongruous with initial nonangiographic cross-sectional imaging findings
    • Latent period (average 72 hours)
  • The Expanded Denver Criteria are used to determine patients who need CTA screening for BCVI after trauma.
  • Infarct is primary driver of morbidity and mortality. Carotid dissections have worse prognosis than vertebral dissections. Grades III–V have worse outcomes.

Key Diagnostic Features:

  • CTA of the neck is the standard of care screening modality. Sensitivity with modern 16+ slice scanners is nearly 100%.
    • MRA is an adjunct exam, but sensitivity can be as low as 50%.
    • MRI finding of crescentic hyperintensity on fat-suppressed T1 surrounding the vessel lumen indicates intramural hematoma.
    • Digital subtraction angiography does not provide information about the vessel wall and is only indicated when an endovascular intervention is planned.
  • Denver Criteria are more widely used. Grading is based around incidence of stroke. Higher grades indicate a greater risk of stroke.
    •   Grade I: dissection or intramural hematoma with <25% luminal narrowing; includes nonstenotic vessel wall irregularity
    •   Grade II: dissection or intramural hematoma with >25% luminal narrowing; visible intimal flap or intraluminal thrombus
    •   Grade III: pseudoaneurysm
    •   Grade IV: complete occlusion
    •   Grade V: arterial transection or AVF formation
  • Pseudoaneurysm represents contained rupture and demonstrates ballooning of the free wall and often some compression of the vessel lumen. Look for a narrow neck/opening.

Differential Diagnoses:

  • Atherosclerosis: calcification versus intramural hematoma—hematoma should be bright on the T1 fat-saturated images
  • Carotid fibromuscular dysplasia: has a string of beads appearance, also seen in renal arteries
  • Vasospasm (posttraumatic spasm): repeat imaging; spasm resolves after several hours
  • Vasculitis, hypoplastic ICA: Rare. Look for asymmetrically small carotid canal or hypoplastic vertebral arteries (uniform narrowing along length of vessel)
  • Pitfalls: suboptimal contrast timing, carotid canal BCVI easy to overlook, tortuous V3 segment may mask BCVI. 
    • Use 3D postprocessing software to optimally assess the vessels off the standard axes (MPR).
    • T1 black-blood flow suppression can help mitigate a poorly timed contrast exam.

Treatment:

  • Generally, all Grade I–IV BCVIs are treated with antithrombotic therapy (aspirin, etc) for stroke prevention
  • Surgical/endovascular (especially for Grade V or worsening imaging/clinical presentation)
  • Direct pressure for expanding hematoma (until surgical intervention)
  • Stents only for aneurysms refractory to other treatments
  • Follow-up imaging should be obtained 7–10 days after initial detection to evaluate for progression that may necessitate an intervention
May 25, 2023

A 52-year-old man presents with headache and left-sided ptosis, miosis, and facial anaesthesia (Horner syndrome) after skiing and coughing.

View Case
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Print ISSN: 0195-6108 Online ISSN: 1936-959X

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