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A Case of Dizziness

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A Case of Dizziness William Barsan, M.D. University of Michigan History 29 y.o. female with hx of migraine. Had sudden onset of falling and vertigo for 1 minute in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Case of Dizziness


1
A Case of Dizziness
  • William Barsan, M.D.
  • University of Michigan

2
History
  • 29 y.o. female with hx of migraine. Had sudden
    onset of falling and vertigo for 1 minute in the
    morning - resolved. Felt light headed and
    noticed left neck pain radiating to left temporal
    area (dull ache - not migrainous).
  • Past History migraine
  • Meds BCP, Imitrex prn

3
Physical Examination
  • BP 137/88 P 80 Afebrile
  • Eyes normal w/o nystagmus
  • Neuro no focal deficits

4
ED Evaluation
  • ASA po
  • MRI/MRA from the ED

5
MRI/MRA Results
  • Left vertebral artery dissection
  • No thrombus

6
Management
  • Admission to Neurology service
  • IV Heparin, d/c on Warfarin
  • Evaluation for Ehler-Danlos IV

7
REFERENCES
  • Silbert et al Headache and Neck Pain in
    Spontaneous Carotid and Vertebral Artery
    Dissections, Neurology 451517-1522, 1995.
  • Documents signs and symptoms in 161 patients with
    dissection.
  • Biousse et al Head Pain in Non-Traumatic
    Carotid Artery Dissection, Cephalgia 1433-36,
    1994.
  • Discusses presenting signs and symptoms of
    carotid artery dissection.
  • Schierink et al Heritable Connective Tissue
    Disorders in Cervical Artery Dissections,
    Neurology 501166-1169, 1998.
  • Documents that connective tissue disorders are
    common in dissection patients although they dont
    meet the classic criteria for diagnosis.
  • Wityk Stroke in a Healthy 46 year old man,
    JAMA 285(21)2757-2762, 2001
  • Case presentation of spontaneous carotid
    dissection with a literature review.

8
OUTCOME
  • MRI/MRA 6 months later
  • Normalization of vertebral artery appearance
  • Workup for connective tissue disorder negative
  • Coumadin d/c
  • Remains well one year later

9
Summary
  • Etiology
  • History
  • Physical exam
  • Diagnostic workup
  • Treatment

10
Etiology
  • Peak incidence 40s
  • 2.5 of first strokes
  • Carotid - males females
  • Vertebral - females gt males
  • Association with arteriopathy/trauma

11
Arteriopathies
  • Fibromuscular dysplasia
  • Ehlers-Danlos type IV
  • Marfans

12
Etiology
  • Trauma - may be mild
  • Spontaneous
  • Cervical manipulation
  • Association with migraine
  • Respiratory infections (?)

13
Stroke Mechanism
  • Occlusion of lumen
  • Thrombosis/embolus

14
History
  • Precedent trauma
  • Associated neurological symptoms
  • Migraine (25-50)
  • Headache, neck pain
  • Amaurosis fugax
  • Pulsatile tinnitus
  • Cranial nerve paresis

15
Carotid vs. Vertebral
  • Neck pain - 26 vs. 46
  • Headache - 68 vs. 69
  • Symptom development - 4 days vs. 14 hours
  • Carotid - eye, facial, ear pain

16
PHYSICAL EXAM
  • Horners syndrome (carotid)
  • Cranial nerve palsies
  • II, IV, V, Vi, VII, IX, X, XII
  • Stroke syndrome

17
DIAGNOSTIC WORKUP
  • Ultrasound
  • MRA
  • Angiography

18
Location of Dissection
  • Carotid - C1 - C2 level
  • Vertebral - C1 - C2 level

19
Treatment
  • Acute stroke - thrombolysis
  • IV heparin
  • Admission
  • Warfarin for 3-6 months
  • Re-imaging

20
The most appropriate acute treatment for
extracranial artery dissection is
  • Angioplasty and stenting
  • Endarterectomy
  • IV Heparin
  • Arterial ligation
  • Beta blockers and antihypertensives

21
Which of the following in most often associated
with arterial dissections?
  • Atherosclerosis
  • History of MI
  • Prior intracranial hemorrhage
  • Migraine
  • Aortic dissection

22
Which of the following is NOT a common presenting
complaint with dissection?
  • Neck pain
  • Facial pain
  • Headache
  • Nuchal rigidity
  • Neurological deficit

23
The diagnostic test of choice for diagnosis of
arterial dissection is
  • Contrast angiography
  • Magnetic resonance angiography
  • Duplex ultrasound
  • CT
  • PET imaging
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