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J Korean Soc Emerg Med > Volume 12(3); 2001 > Article
Journal of The Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2001;12(3): 348-353.
Subclavian Artery Aneurysm due to Takayasu's Arteritis
Nam Soo Cho, Soo Hyeong Cho, Gwang Chol Park
Department of Emergency Medicine, Chosun University Hospital, Kwangju, Korea. chosooh@hanmail.net
ABSTRACT
Takayasu's arteritis is a non-specific inflammatory process that involves the aorta and its main branches, the etiology of which remains unknown. This arteritis occurs predominantly in young Asian women, although there have been many documented cases in males and non-Asians. Criteria for the diagnosis of Takayasu's arteritis were developed by The Subcommittee on Classification of Vasculitis of the American College of Rheumatology in 1990, of which a modified version is shown in Table 1. The presence of three or more of the six criteria shown demonstrated a diagnostic sensitivity of 90.5% and a specificity of 97.8%. Takayasu's arteritis is known as 'pulseless disease,' and this non-specific inflammatory arteriopathy typically produces segmental arterial narrowing and occlusion with resultant end-organ ischemic consequences, including upper extremity digital necrosis, stroke, visceral ischemia and renal failure. Previously reported sites of aneurysm formation include the thoracic and abdominal aorta, as well as the innominate, the carotid and the superior mesenteric arteries, but rarely the subclavian artery. A 26-year-old man presented with a progressively enlarging and tender pulsatile mass at the base of the left neck, intermittent Claudication of the upper limbs in association with a decreased brachial artery pulse and a bruit over the subclavian artery. Computed tomography and aortography demonstrated a 4 cmX5 cm aneurysm of the left subclavian artery. There was no evidence of occlusive disease. An aneurysmectomy with 8 mm hemashield graft interposis was performed . Pathology revealed a chronic, active inflammatory process. Aneurysm formation is an unusual complication of Takayasu's arteritis. Emergency department physicians must carefully observed patiens with symptomatic upper extremity pain and paresthesia and must consider whether those symptoms might be due to the formation of a subclavian artery aneurysm due to Takayasu's arteritis
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