Fatal intracranial arterial dissection: clinical pathological correlation.
Open Access
- 1 February 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
- Vol. 48 (2), 111-121
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.48.2.111
Abstract
The clinical pathological features of fatal arterial dissection confined to the intracranial vessels are described. Three patients with anterior circulation dissections presented with focal ischaemic neurological deficits and pathological examination of involved vessels revealed a dissection plane between internal elastic lamina and media accompanied by intravascular thrombosis. Three of four patients with posterior circulation dissections had clinical pathological features of subarachnoid haemorrhage and at necropsy had transmural dissections. In contrast to previous reports, primary vasculopathies either degenerative or inflammatory were not identified in affected vessels. The pathogenesis of intracranial arterial dissection is discussed and the clinical features are correlated with the pathological abnormalities.This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage from intracranial dissecting aneurysmJournal of Neurosurgery, 1984
- Cerebral dissecting aneurysms in patients with moyamoya diseaseJournal of Neurosurgery, 1983
- Intracranial dissecting aneurysms in childhood.Stroke, 1982
- Nontraumatic dissecting aneurysm of the vertebral arteryJournal of Neurosurgery, 1982
- Cerebrovascular moyamoya disease associated with an intracranial pseudoaneurysmJournal of Neurosurgery, 1982
- Fenestrations in the internal elastic lamina at bifurcations of human cerebral arteries.Stroke, 1981
- Dissecting aneurysms of the basilar artery in 2 patients.Stroke, 1979
- Biased Ascertainment and the Natural History of DiseasesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- Fibromuscular dysplasia and multiple dissecting aneurysms of intracranial arteries. A further cause of Moyamoya syndrome.Stroke, 1976
- Dissecting aneurysm of the middle cerebral artery as a cause of acute infantile hemiplegiaThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1957