Spontaneous carotid artery aneurysms

Adult Carotid Artery Diseases Male Adolescent Antibiotic Prophylaxis Middle Aged Aneurysm 3. Good health Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation 03 medical and health sciences Treatment Outcome 0302 clinical medicine Humans Female Follow-Up Studies
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2168.2000.01355.x Publication Date: 2003-03-11T07:13:28Z
ABSTRACT
Abstract Background Spontaneous carotid artery aneurysms are infrequently reported, and are almost always non-atherosclerotic. Methods The records of 29 patients with a spontaneous carotid aneurysm treated in an academic vascular unit between 1990 and 1998 were reviewed. Results All 29 patients were black South Africans; three had bilateral aneurysms. There were 24 men and five women, of mean age 35 (range 13–62) years. Some 25 aneurysms involved the common carotid artery, 12 of which affected the bifurcation, and seven were located in the internal carotid artery. Twenty-five aneurysms were managed surgically, four of which were ligated owing to sepsis. Histological evaluation showed human immunodeficiency virus-related arteritis in four, tuberculous aneurysms in ten, Takayasu's arteritis in two, atherosclerosis in three and non-specific chronic inflammation in four patients. Microbiological examination was negative in all but one patient who had Salmonella sp. cultured. Outcome was generally favourable, but one patient died from massive hemispheric infarction. There were no other new neurological deficits. Conclusion Carotid aneurysms pose a considerable surgical challenge but are amenable to operative intervention with good result. Ligation appears to be well tolerated in this group of predominantly non-atherosclerotic aneurysms.
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