Endovascular treatment of radiation-induced Carotid Blowout Syndrome: Report of two cases

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Abstract

Background: Carotid Blowout Syndrome (CBS), or Carotid Artery Rupture (CAR), is a delayed complication with potentially fatal consequences occurring after the implementation of radiotherapy on head and neck tumors. In this report we describe two patients received endovascular treatment for severe hemorrhagic CBS developing 36 and 2 years, respectively, after radiotherapy. Both patients survived and responded positively to treatment. Methods: Case 1 was an 80-year-old woman found with minor hemorrhage near the bifurcation of the common carotid artery, 36 years after neck irradiation. She experienced frequent hemorrhagic events during the following years. Six years after the initial discovery of bleeding, she experienced massive hemorrhage, lapsed into shock, and was admitted to an Emergency Room. Connective tissue around the carotid artery was largely exposed due to neck skin defect. After hemorrhage was halted by manual compression, transient hemostasis was achieved with coil embolization of the aneurysm presumed to be the source of bleeding. Recurrent hemorrhage developed two weeks later with unraveled coil mass extrusion. Parent artery occlusion was performed by endovascular trapping, achieving permanent hemostasis. Case 2 presented massive nasal bleeding originating from the petrous segment of the internal carotid artery, 2 years after having been treated with heavy particle irradiation for olfactory neuroblastoma. Ischemic tolerance was confirmed by balloon occlusion test. Based on previous experiences, the bleeding was immediately halted by endovascular trapping. Result: Both patients were subsequently discharged, free of new neurological symptoms. Conclusion: Emergent hemostatic treatment is required in CBS developing severe hemorrhage. However, within irradiation fields, temporal embolization devices hardly lead to complete resolution. This is due to the deteriorated condition of the vascular wall incapable to enduring the expansion power of coils, stents or balloons. Bypass grafting is also difficult, due to the fragile surrounding tissue. Although, the application of sufficiently-long covered stents is anticipated in the future, parent artery embolization is often required to save the patient: s life even when the occlusion test is impossible. In such cases, endovascular trapping out of irradiation fields is the most reliable and efficacious treatment for achieving permanent hemostasis.

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Adachi, A., Kobayashi, E., Watanabe, Y., Yoneyama-Sarnecky, T., Hayasaka, M., Suzuki, H., … Saeki, N. (2011). Endovascular treatment of radiation-induced Carotid Blowout Syndrome: Report of two cases. Japanese Journal of Neurosurgery, 20(8), 597–603. https://doi.org/10.7887/jcns.20.597

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