Spontaneous multivessel cervical artery dissection in a patient with a substitution of alanine for glycine (G13A) in the alpha 1 (I) chain of type I collagen

SA Mayer, BS Rubin, BJ Starman, PH Byers - Neurology, 1996 - AAN Enterprises
SA Mayer, BS Rubin, BJ Starman, PH Byers
Neurology, 1996AAN Enterprises
Cervical artery dissection occurs spontaneously and in multiple vessels with surprising
frequency. An underlying arteriopathy is frequently suspected, but specific causes of
vascular fragility are rarely identified. We describe a 35-year-old woman who developed
multiple cervical artery dissections after scuba diving. She had no stigmata of connective
tissue disease apart from bluish sclerae, and no family history of arterial dissection or
congenital musculoskeletal disease. Analysis of the COL1A1 gene that encodes the pro …
Cervical artery dissection occurs spontaneously and in multiple vessels with surprising frequency.An underlying arteriopathy is fr`equently suspected, but specific causes of vascular fragility are rarely identified. We describe a 35-year-old woman who developed multiple cervical artery dissections after scuba diving. She had no stigmata of connective tissue disease apart from bluish sclerae, and no family history of arterial dissection or congenital musculoskeletal disease. Analysis of the COL1A1 gene that encodes the pro alpha 1(I) chains of type I procollagen revealed a point mutation in one allele, resulting in substitution of alanine for glycine (G13A) in about half the alpha 1(I) chains of type I collagen. Genetic disorders of collagen, such as the mild phenotypic variant of osteogenesis imperfecta identified in our patient, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of unexplained cervical artery dissection.
NEUROLOGY 1996;47: 552-556
American Academy of Neurology