Clinical communicationVertebral artery dissection due to minor neck trauma
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Cited by (41)
It's in the game: A review of neurological lesions associated with sports
2023, Journal of the Neurological SciencesApproach to blunt, sharp, and transportation deaths
2022, Principles of Forensic Pathology: From Investigation to CertificationEpidemiology, pathophysiology, and treatment of traumatic cervical vascular injury
2017, Seminars in Spine SurgeryCitation Excerpt :On the contrary, misdiagnosed VAI has often been reported to cause acute neurologic deterioration in patients with cervical spine injury.15–17 It is hard to precisely know the actual VAI incidence after blunt cervical trauma, because even minor cervical traumas like yoga or chiropractic manipulation are known to cause vertebral dissection.18,19 Yet, the overall reported incidence of VAI among total blunt trauma admissions ranged from 0.20% to 0.77%.20
Symptomatic spontaneous intracranial carotid artery dissection treated with a self-expanding intracranial nitinol stent: a case report
2009, Surgical NeurologyCitation Excerpt :There are reports in the literature regarding treating patients with anticoagulation [20,35,37-39]. However, in those cases with a hemorrhagic infarct or SAH, anticoagulation is contraindicated [12,26,35,36,40,43,45]. Metso et al [35] recently published the largest series found in the literature regarding the management of intracranial dissections with anticoagulation.
"Golfer's stroke": golf-induced stroke from vertebral artery dissection
2007, Surgical NeurologyCitation Excerpt :Dissection of the vertebral artery, once thought to be rare, has been reported with increasing frequency after even seemingly minor head turning in young or middle-aged adults without predisposing risk factors for cerebrovascular disease [9]. Although various case reports have described vertebral dissection after chiropratic manipulation [20,22], sports-related trauma (yoga, tennis [8], volleyball, judo [13], wrestling), and even while delivering mail [11], few case reports can be found in the literature that cite golf as a precipitant of dissection. Given the immense popularity of the sport and the relatively uniform swing characteristics of participants (involving rapid, forceful head and body rotation), any correlation between swing mechanics and subsequent vertebral dissection might have far-reaching, and perhaps underreported, implications.