Objective and importance: We describe a novel cervical-to-petrous internal carotid artery (ICA) saphenous vein in situ bypass for the treatment of a high cervical dissecting aneurysm. The cervical ICA has no major collateral branches and can be used as a tunnel for the vein graft.
Clinical presentations: A 25-year-old man was involved in a car accident. A cerebral angiogram revealed a right ICA dissection with aneurysm formation at the C1-C2 level. The patient recovered fully and was anticoagulated. Six months after the initial angiogram, a second angiogram disclosed ICA stenosis (80%) and persistence of the traumatic dissecting aneurysm. Definitive surgical bypass was considered the most appropriate course of action.
Technique: The horizontal portion of the petrous ICA was exposed by an extradural subtemporal approach. The cervical arteries were exposed by a separate surgical incision. After dividing the petrous ICA and the cervical ICA, the cervical ICA was dilated using a Fogarty balloon embolectomy catheter. A saphenous vein graft was inserted inside the lumen of the cervical ICA and was anastomosed to the ICA end-to-end both proximally and distally (cervical-to-petrous ICA in situ bypass). The graft was patent on the follow-up angiogram.
Conclusion: We describe a new technique that could be considered an alternative to the classical extra-anatomic cervical-to-petrous ICA bypass procedures.