Cervical Artery Dissections—A Demographical Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Characteristics Treatment Procedures, and Outcomes—A Single Centre Study of 54 Consecutive Cases

Author:

Roman Filip Iulian1,Morosanu Valentin1,Spinu Doina1,Motoc Claudiu1,Bajko Zoltan1,Sarmasan Emanuela1,Roman Corina2,Balasa Rodica1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, “George Emil Palade” University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Sciences and Technology, 540136 Targu Mures, Romania

2. Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, “Lucian Blaga” University of Sibiu, 550169 Sibiu, Romania

Abstract

Cervical artery dissections (CAD) are a common cause of ischemic cerebrovascular events among the younger and middle-aged population. Altogether, CAD counts for up to 15% of all causes of stroke in patients aged 50 or younger. Among the known etiological causes, especially addressing the younger population with mechanical traumas and whiplash injuries are regarded as the main culprits. However, cases of spontaneous dissection are also widespread, with risk factors such as hypertension, migraine, and lifestyle factors increasing the risk of occurrence. Clinically, the symptoms associated with a cerebrovascular event caused by CADs are highly variable and can be classified as either compressive symptoms (such as Horner’s syndrome and cervical pain) or stroke syndromes attributable to cerebral ischemia. Therefore, establishing an early diagnosis might be particularly challenging as it requires particular attention and quick clinical reasoning when interviewing the patient. With these certain particularities, our main focus was to conduct a prospective study involving up to 54 patients who were diagnosed with CAD in our clinical facility between January 2015 and December 2022, with the focus of assessing certain individual parameters attributable to each patient and their influence and prognosis value for their short and long term evolution. An important emphasis was placed on parameters such as topographical localization, clinical presentation, severity of the questioned cerebrovascular event, outcomes, and causative factors. Statistical validity tools were applied when possible.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

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