Eagle syndrome an overlooked cause of internal carotid artery dissection, Case series

IF 0.4 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Abeer Sabry Safan , Mohamed A. Atta , Isra Eltazi , Gayane Melikyan , Ahmed El Sotouhy , Yahia Imam
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Abstract

Background

Eagle syndrome is a rare condition with a prevalence estimated at 4%, with 0.16% exhibiting symptoms of Eagle’s syndrome resulting from an elongated styloid process or a calcified stylohyoid ligament, compressing over nearby vessels and nerves. Symptoms range from simple headache, neck pain, and odynophagia to cerebral ischemia. Since it can be an incidental finding, management is controversial and ranges from conservative treatment to surgical intervention, including internal carotid stenting and styloidectomy.

Clinical presentation

We report two cases of Eagle’s syndrome. Case one (Vascular variant): 44 years old presented with left-sided weakness with Magnetic Resonance Imaging and an angiogram of the brain showing a right middle cerebral artery hemispheric infarct with a right internal carotid artery (ICA) dissection and elongated styloid processes more on the left. The patient’s condition improved with supportive care. He was treated with aspirin, atorvastatin, and an intensive 16-week rehabilitation program. Case two (Classic variant): 41 years old presented with refractory occipital headache and neck pain without vascular insult. Magnetic resonance of both patients showed a long styloid process.

Conclusions

Eagle’s Syndrome is a rare entity and perhaps overlooked as an anatomical variant that ought to be considered a possible etiology in atraumatic ICA dissection in patients with no discernable risk factors. As observed in case one, with atraumatic ICA dissection and unremarkable connective tissue disease work-up, highlighting anatomical variant, as an etiology to his ischemic stroke. Styloidectomy should be considered to avert risk of recurrent IC dissections in such patients with atraumatic IC dissection and classic eagle’s syndrome with refractory orofacial pain syndromes exacerbated by head movement or yawning.

鹰综合征是颈内动脉夹层的一个被忽视的原因,病例系列
背景:deagle综合征是一种罕见的疾病,患病率估计为4%,其中0.16%表现出由茎突拉长或茎突舌骨韧带钙化导致的Eagle综合征症状,压迫附近的血管和神经。症状从单纯的头痛、颈部疼痛、咽痛到脑缺血。由于它可能是偶然发现的,治疗是有争议的,从保守治疗到手术干预,包括颈内动脉支架置入和茎突切除术。我们报告2例鹰氏综合征。病例一(血管变异):44岁,表现为左侧虚弱,磁共振成像和脑血管造影显示右侧大脑中动脉半球性梗死,右侧颈内动脉剥离,左侧茎突延长。病人的病情在支持性护理下得到改善。他接受了阿司匹林、阿托伐他汀和为期16周的强化康复治疗。病例二(经典变异):41岁,顽固性枕头头痛和颈部疼痛,无血管损伤。两例患者的磁共振显示茎突长。结论西格勒综合征是一种罕见的疾病,作为一种解剖变异可能被忽视,在无明显危险因素的非外伤性颈内动脉夹层患者中应考虑其可能的病因。正如病例1所观察到的,无创伤性ICA解剖和无显著结缔组织疾病检查,突出解剖变异,作为缺血性中风的病因。对于非外伤性IC夹层和典型鹰氏综合征合并难治性口面部疼痛综合征的患者,应考虑行茎突切除术,以避免复发性IC夹层的风险,这些患者会因头部运动或打哈欠而加重。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
236
审稿时长
15 weeks
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