IJCS | Volume 31, Nº5, September / October 2018

DOI: 10.5935/2359-4802.20180053 548 CASE REPORT International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences. 2018;31(5)548-550 Mailing Address: Rafael Mansur Souto Rua Farme de Amoedo, n 149, Postal Code: 22420-020, Rio de Janeiro, RJ - Brazil. E-mail: rafaelmansur1250@hotmail.com Persistent Primitive Hypoglossal Artery Associated with Brain Stem Ischemia in an Elderly Patient Rafael Mansur Souto, Alair Augusto Sarmet Moreira Damas dos Santos, Marcelo Souto Nacif Centro de Imagem, Complexo Hospitalar de Niterói, Niterói, RJ - Brazil Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências Cardiovasculares, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Niterói, RJ - Brazil Manuscript received on August 18, 2017; revised on February 05, 2018; accepted on March 27, 2018. Cerebrovascular Disease, persistent primitive hypoglossal artery; primitive arteries, carotid-basilar anastomoses, Arteriosclerosis. Keywords Introduction The primitive hypoglossal artery (PHA) crosses the hypoglossal canal, being one of the four vessels that acts as anastomosis between the primitive dorsal aorta and longitudinal neural arteries. The PHA typically retracts 40 days after pregnancy but may persist in some situations. 1 Direct anastomoses between the basilar and carotid arteries are rare. 1-3 These vessels retreat during the fortieth day of fetal development, when the emergence of the posterior communicating arteries occurs. 1 Among these primitive communicating vessels are the trigeminal, the primitive hypoglossal, the proatlantal and the ophthalmic vessels. 1,2,4 The persistence of the primitive hypoglossal artery has an incidence of 0.01% to 0.03%, being the second most frequent among the four vessels. 4-6 Persistent PHA (PPHA) occurs when it emerges at the level of C1 to C3 and enters the posterior fossa, crossing the hypoglossal canal, and ending at the basilar artery. 4 The posterior communicating artery is hypoplastic or absent. The diagnosis may be attained through angiotomography and angiography assessments. 1 Case report An 80-year-old man, a patient with systemic arterial hypertension and diabetes mellitus, had malaise with lipothymia for two days, and therefore sought medical assistance. After he showed no improvement, he returned to the emergency unit a few days later, with persistent symptoms of dysarthria and apathy, as well as right hemiparesis. During his clinical evolution, he showed worsening of the condition and homolateral dysmetria. Initially, the patient was diagnosed with left-sided cerebrovascular accident (CVA) in the brainstem, with diffusion restriction disclosed by a skull MRI (Figure 1A). Subsequently, the carotid and vertebral Doppler showed the following findings: calcified plaques in both carotid bulbs with approximately 50% of bilateral obstruction and preserved flow in both vertebral arteries. In the angiotomography of the carotid and vertebral arteries, PHA persistence was shown combined with the basilar artery (Figures 1B and 1C), as well as atherosclerotic arterial disease with slight carotid bulb lumen reduction on the right and moderate on the left. In most cases, PPHA occurs only as an incidental finding at an examination indicated for other reasons. It is important, however, to be aware that when a carotid endarterectomy is intended for some other reason, there are some risks in the presence of such condition. Among these are the high carotid exposure and the challenges of maintaining cerebral perfusion. 1 In our case, the patient developed brainstem CVA, with subsequent hemorrhagic transformation. At the angiotomography, the patient showed the presence of mixed plaque, affecting the distal end of the left common carotid, bulb and ostium of the internal carotid artery, generating moderate luminal reduction of the internal carotid on this side. He also showed signs of contralateral carotid bulb atherosclerotic disease. This fact is described in the literature, 6 according to which patients with persistent hypoglossal artery have high risks of atherosclerotic disease and cerebrovascular accidents, as well as subarachnoid hemorrhage and aneurysms.

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