Abstract

Even though cervical artery dissection is one of the main reasons for ischemic stroke in young patients, acute management and post-acute primary or secondary prevention of cerebral ischemia differ significantly in different centers and countries. These discrepancies are reflected by the differences in guideline recommendations of major stroke societies. Our narrative review aims to shed light on the different recommendations in guideline-statements of stroke societies and to give an overview of the current literature concerning acute management and post-acute treatment of cervical artery dissection patients. In general, intravenous thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy are recommended, irrespective of stroke etiology, if administered within the label. Secondary prevention of cerebral ischemia can be achieved by antiplatelet intake or anticoagulation, with, to date, neither treatment establishing superiority over the other. Duration of antithrombotic treatment, statin use as well as optimal endovascular approach are still up for debate and need further evaluation. Additionally, it is still unknown, whether the recommendations given in any of the guideline statements are similarly relevant in spontaneous and traumatic cervical artery dissection, as none of the stroke societies differentiates between the two.

Highlights

  • The pathognomonic characteristic of a cervical artery dissection (CeAD) is a vessel wall hematoma in either supra-aortal extra-cranial carotid or vertebral artery [1]

  • Diagnosis is established through neurovascular imaging with the intramural hematoma appearing as a semilunar hyper-intensity in fat-saturated T1 Magnetic resonance (MR)-imaging [5]

  • As the endpoint occurred in about one in four patients receiving an antiplatelet agent and only one in seven under anticoagulation the authors concluded that noninferiority of aspirin compared to vitamin K-antagonists could not be established. As these data do not incorporate the hyper-acute phase of CeAD, stroke guideline statements could not define specific treatment recommendations, which is unfortunate as most ischemic events post-CeAD occur during the first couple of days [11,59,60]

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Summary

Introduction

The pathognomonic characteristic of a cervical artery dissection (CeAD) is a vessel wall hematoma in either supra-aortal extra-cranial carotid or vertebral artery [1]. Even though CeAD is established as one of the main reasons for ischemic stroke in young patients (

Acute management
Acute management — endovascular thrombectomy
Acute ischemic stroke or TIA after CeAD
Acute management — discussion
Post-acute and long-term medical treatment
Medical treatment — antiplatelet agents and anticoagulation
Medical treatment — DOACs
Medical treatment — duration
Endovascular management — stenting
Secondary prevention of ischemic stroke
Findings
Post-acute management — discussion
Full Text
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