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Basilar artery incarceration secondary to a longitudinal clivus fracture: A rare and favorable outcome of an often devastating injury.

Background: Clival fractures are a rare traumatic finding and are often the result of high-impact craniofacial trauma. Rarely, longitudinal clival fractures can be associated with incarceration of the basilar artery within the fracture and/or the sphenoid sinus. Of the 12 reported cases of basilar incarceration, 11 of these injuries have proved to be fatal due to pontine infarction. We present a patient with basilar artery incarceration without any neurologic deficits.

Case Description: The case reported is a 17-year-old male who presented after a motor vehicle collision with a linear and longitudinal clival fracture with entrapment of the basilar artery within the sphenoid sinus. Diagnostic subtraction angiography showed a small intimal tear with possible intraluminal thrombus. The patient was started on aspirin and at 3-month post injury had no neurologic deficits.

Conclusion: Basilar artery incarceration is an injury often associated with pontine infarction secondary to basilar artery dissection and/or thrombus developing at the site of entrapment. Our case illustrates a favorable outcome after this injury. Based on these results, antiplatelet therapy may be a viable option for prevention of brainstem infarcts in patients with this injury; however, further prospective studies must be done to assess the overall efficacy and validity of this treatment. There are no established treatment guidelines for this condition. Further research on this topic should also be tailored toward early identification of this pathology and prevention of thromboembolic sequelae of this injury.

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