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POSTERIOR INFERIOR CEREBELLAR ARTERY ORIGIN THROMBOSIS WITH ANEURYSM OF COLLATERALIZED POSTERIOR MENINGEAL ARTERY PRESENTING AS SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE: CASE REPORT
Journal article   Peer reviewed

POSTERIOR INFERIOR CEREBELLAR ARTERY ORIGIN THROMBOSIS WITH ANEURYSM OF COLLATERALIZED POSTERIOR MENINGEAL ARTERY PRESENTING AS SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE: CASE REPORT

Steven W. Chang, Udaya K. Kakarla, Giriraj K. Sharma and Robert F. Spetzler
Neurosurgery, Vol.65(4), pp.818-819
10/01/2009
PMID: 19834362

Abstract

Clinical Neurology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Neurosciences & Neurology Science & Technology Surgery
OBJECTIVE: This is the first report of a ruptured aneurysm involving a collateral branch to the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) in a patient who had a subarachnoid hemorrhage. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 56-year-old man initially presented with a subarachnoid hemorrhage and underwent 2 catheter-based 4-vessel angiograms with negative results. A delayed angiogram 4 weeks later revealed a dissecting aneurysm of the posterior meningeal artery, a branch of the vertebral artery. INTERVENTION: A 3-dimensional reconstruction of the vertebral angiogram showed proximal occlusion of the proximal left PICA and distal filling via a collateral branch from the posterior meningeal artery. A far-lateral approach was used for this patient. The aneurysm was found along the course of the collateral posterior meningeal artery and was clipped successfully. CONCLUSION: Aneurysms involving collateral branches of the PICA are rare. It is important to recognize such collateral flow preoperatively because inadvertent sacrifice of these vessels during a surgical approach could lead to stroke and neurological deficits of the PICA territory.

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