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Training Collections
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Black Friday Save 30%On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Black Friday Save 30%Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Black Friday Save 40%Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
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Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
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60 topics, 3 hr. 18 min.
Introduction to the Carotid Space
3 m.Suprahyoid Spaces of the Head and Neck
4 m.Carotid Space Imaging Protocols
3 m.Contents of the Carotid Space
3 m.Carotid Space – Vitamin C&D
2 m.Vasculopathies and Variants
6 m.Carotid Fibromuscular Dysplasia with Dissection
8 m.Takayasu’s arteritis
3 m.Loeys-Dietz Syndrome
2 m.Marfan’s Syndrome
2 m.Carotid Space Infections
5 m.Causes of Internal Jugular Vein Thrombosis
5 m.Lemierre’s Syndrome
4 m.Internal Jugular Vein Thrombosis
3 m.Ludwig’s Angina (Carotid)
3 m.Internal Carotid Arteritis Secondary to Sialadenitis
3 m.Trauma in the Carotid Space
2 m.Penetrating Gunshot Wound of the Carotid Artery
4 m.Idiopathic Internal Carotid Artery Dissection
4 m.Internal Carotid Artery Dissection and Pseudoaneurysm
4 m.Horner Syndrome with Carotid Dissection
6 m.Carotid Blowout
3 m.Dissection and Strokes
6 m.Cervical Carotid Artery Dissection
4 m.Horner Syndrome
5 m.Value of Neurovascular Imaging for Seat Belt Injury
6 m.Right Internal Carotid Artery Pseudoaneurysm
3 m.Carotidynia – summary
4 m.Carotidynia
3 m.Carotid Space Neoplasms
2 m.Carotid Body Tumor
4 m.Carotid Body Tumor - Right Side
3 m.Bilateral Carotid Body Tumors
4 m.Carotid Body Tumor - Summary
5 m.Carotid Body Tumor Preoperative Imaging
3 m.Glomus Jugulare – summary
3 m.Glomus Jugulare with Tinnitis
4 m.Glomus Jugulare
3 m.Glomus Jugulare Tumor
2 m.Glomus Vagale – summary
3 m.Glomus Vagale
6 m.Hereditary Paragangliomas
3 m.Glomus Vagale, Carotid Body Tumor, Multiple Paragangliomas
4 m.Carotid Space Schwannomas
7 m.Vagal Schwannoma
4 m.Vagal Schwannoma, Growing in to Jugular Foramen
4 m.Carotid Space Neoplasms and Mass Effect
4 m.Sympathetic Trunk Neurofibroma in Neurofibromatosis
4 m.Carotid Space Meningioma
3 m.Carotid Invasion and Malignancy
3 m.Glottic Squamous Cell Carcinoma Invading the Carotid Space
4 m.Carotid Encasement from Metastatic Neuroblastoma
3 m.Characterizing Carotid Encasement
5 m.Lymph nodes by level of involvement
4 m.Tumors Impacting the Internal Jugular Vein
3 m.Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Metastasis Mimicking Glomus
4 m.Pathology in the Carotid Space – Summary
6 m.The Cervical Sympathetic Chain
1 m.Vagus Nerve Anatomy
2 m.Deep Cervical Fascia of the Carotid Sheath
3 m.0:01
This was a patient who had pain over the right side
0:04
of the neck in the area from C5 to C3.
0:08
And if we start from above for a change,
0:11
we're going to be looking at
0:12
the right side of the neck.
0:15
And as we look at the entrance to the
0:18
petrous internal carotid arteries,
0:20
the carotid arteries appear symmetric.
0:23
However, as we go down,
0:25
we start to see an area of thickening around the
0:30
right internal carotid artery and extending to
0:34
some of the external carotid artery branches.
0:37
This thickened soft tissue extends to
0:41
the common carotid artery as well.
0:43
What I'm looking at is this tissue around the
0:47
right common carotid artery. Comparing it,
0:50
the left common carotid artery,
0:53
as you can see, it goes down into the neck,
0:57
but really, I'd say it begins right around
1:00
this junction here,
1:01
which is remarkably very close to the C3,
1:04
C4 level.
1:05
So this was an example of an individual whose main
1:10
issue was tenderness associated with the common
1:14
carotid artery and proximal right internal carotid
1:18
artery with thickening of the wall.
1:20
And this tenderness resolved using non-steroidal
1:23
anti-inflammatory drug. So some might say, well,
1:26
maybe.
1:26
How do you know that this isn't
1:28
wall injury from dissection?
1:30
One of the things that is typical of a dissection
1:33
is it usually does not cross a bifurcation.
1:36
It's rare for it to cross a bifurcation.
1:38
So when you have something that's involving both the
1:41
common carotid artery as well as
1:44
the internal carotid artery,
1:45
that's unusual for a dissection in the wall
1:49
and the residual of that.
1:50
So in this case,
1:51
it was an idiopathic inflammatory process.
1:55
Let's just take a quick look at the reconstructions.
1:58
This is showing that thick
2:00
tissue along the common carotid artery.
2:05
See all this thickened tissue and extending up to
2:08
the internal carotid artery above the bifurcation?
2:13
The lumen of the vessel, however,
2:16
actually doesn't look all that bad,
2:18
so it's not as if there was luminal narrowing.
2:20
It was really the circumferential involvement
2:22
of the blood vessel.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
This was a patient who had pain over the right side
0:04
of the neck in the area from C5 to C3.
0:08
And if we start from above for a change,
0:11
we're going to be looking at
0:12
the right side of the neck.
0:15
And as we look at the entrance to the
0:18
petrous internal carotid arteries,
0:20
the carotid arteries appear symmetric.
0:23
However, as we go down,
0:25
we start to see an area of thickening around the
0:30
right internal carotid artery and extending to
0:34
some of the external carotid artery branches.
0:37
This thickened soft tissue extends to
0:41
the common carotid artery as well.
0:43
What I'm looking at is this tissue around the
0:47
right common carotid artery. Comparing it,
0:50
the left common carotid artery,
0:53
as you can see, it goes down into the neck,
0:57
but really, I'd say it begins right around
1:00
this junction here,
1:01
which is remarkably very close to the C3,
1:04
C4 level.
1:05
So this was an example of an individual whose main
1:10
issue was tenderness associated with the common
1:14
carotid artery and proximal right internal carotid
1:18
artery with thickening of the wall.
1:20
And this tenderness resolved using non-steroidal
1:23
anti-inflammatory drug. So some might say, well,
1:26
maybe.
1:26
How do you know that this isn't
1:28
wall injury from dissection?
1:30
One of the things that is typical of a dissection
1:33
is it usually does not cross a bifurcation.
1:36
It's rare for it to cross a bifurcation.
1:38
So when you have something that's involving both the
1:41
common carotid artery as well as
1:44
the internal carotid artery,
1:45
that's unusual for a dissection in the wall
1:49
and the residual of that.
1:50
So in this case,
1:51
it was an idiopathic inflammatory process.
1:55
Let's just take a quick look at the reconstructions.
1:58
This is showing that thick
2:00
tissue along the common carotid artery.
2:05
See all this thickened tissue and extending up to
2:08
the internal carotid artery above the bifurcation?
2:13
The lumen of the vessel, however,
2:16
actually doesn't look all that bad,
2:18
so it's not as if there was luminal narrowing.
2:20
It was really the circumferential involvement
2:22
of the blood vessel.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Vascular Imaging
Neuroradiology
Neuro
Idiopathic
Head and Neck
CT
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