Vertigo as a clinical presentation of a vascular loop of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery
Abstract
Vertigo is a frequent reason for consultation whose origin can be peripheral or central; infrequent causes of the latter are the vascular loops that affect the VIII cranial nerve leading to tinnitus, hearing loss and dizziness. The case of a 47-year-old woman who consulted for a picture of dizziness, nausea, loss of postural tone, headache and facial paraesthesia, and whose physical examination revealed signs of peripheral vertigo, is presented. Treatment was started with antiemetics, anticinetics and vasodilators that lead to worsening of the condition, for which pathology exerting compression due to vasodilation at the central nervous system (CNS) level, is suspected. An MRI is performed showing a vascular loop in the Anterior Lower Cerebellar Artery (AICA) that enters the Internal Auditory Canal (IAC) explaining the symptomatology and whose compressive effect of the central nerves generates a paradoxical effect with the taking of vasodilators.Metrics
Metrics Loading ...
Published
2018-12-15
How to Cite
Méndez-Fandiño, Y. R., López-Sáenz, L. M., Moreno-Mancipe, C., Ochoa Sanabria, C. L., Peñalosa-Villamizar, D. K., & Pérez-Hernández, A. J. (2018). Vertigo as a clinical presentation of a vascular loop of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery. Acta Médica Colombiana, 43(4), 226-229. https://doi.org/10.36104/amc.2018.1086
Issue
Section
Case Reports

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Acta Medica Colombiana uses the CC-BY 4.0 license. Authors retain all rights over their work.