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Short Reports

Vertebro-basilar stroke due to Bow-Hunter syndrome: an unusual presentation of rotatory atlanto-axial subluxation in a fourteen year old

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Pages 808-810 | Received 09 Jan 2019, Accepted 12 Sep 2019, Published online: 22 Sep 2019
 

Abstract

Bow Hunter’s syndrome is a rare disorder usually producing transient ischemic symptoms as a result of dynamic compression of the vertebral artery during head turning. We report a case of a 14 year old male presenting with stroke due to occlusion of vertebral artery due to rotatory atlanto-axial subluxation. The patient presented with sudden onset vertigo and ataxia. History revealed led mild torticollis since childhood which was never investigated. MRI and MRA showed infarcts in the bilateral cerebellar hemispheres and the occipital lobes with a hypoplastic left vertebral artery and kinking of the right vertebral artery at the cranio-vertebral junction due to rotatory atlanto-axial subluxation. The patient was successfully treated by C1 lateral mass and C2 sub-facetal screw with rod fixation. Bow-Hunter’s syndrome producing transient ischemia is well reported but stroke in the vertebro-basilar territory in a 14 year old due to rotatory atlanto-axial subluxation is uncommon, and to the best of our knowledge, this is the eighth such reported case.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

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