Title: Post-traumatic Intracranial Pseudoaneurysm Presenting as Epistaxis

Author(s): Ali Hassan, MD; Chad Donley, DO; Praveen Vankatachalam, MD

Email: ahassan2@mercy.com

Introduction: Epistaxis is a frequent presenting complaint in the Emergency Department (ED).  Roughly 60% of the population will suffer from epistaxis in their lifetime.  The most common causes of epistaxis include nose picking, facial trauma, foreign bodies, and coagulopathies. There are other causes that are much less common, such as intra-cranial pseudoaneurysms. The are multiple known etiologies of intra-cranial pseudoaneurysm formation, with head trauma accounting for less than 1% inciting events.

Case Report(s): A 24-year-old female with history of traumatic brain injury with associated skull fractures due to a gunshot wound to the head 6 months prior presented to the ED in hemorrhagic shock secondary to epistaxis. After stabilization with the administration of blood products, Computed Tomography with Angiography (CTA) imaging of the head and neck was obtained and revealed a 3.1 x 2.2 x 2.5 cm pseudoaneurysm of the cavernous portion of the right internal carotid artery penetrating through the base of the skull into the ethmoidal sinus. The patient was taken for formal angiography by interventional radiology-and a partially thrombosed daughter sac of the initial aneurysm was identified and believed to be the source of the hemorrhage. The aneurysm was successfully coiled and occluded using ONYX embolization. Postoperatively, the patient returned to her baseline mental status without any acute complaints. The patient was discharged back to her nursing home 2 days later with a 3-week follow up CTA revealing persistent occlusion of the aneurysm and a patent internal carotid artery.

Discussion: Awareness and consideration of intra-cranial vascular etiology for common complaints in the emergency room, such as Epistaxis, especially in patients with any history of head injury/trauma, known intracranial aneurysms or prosthetic devices from prior surgery may help guide decision-making in managing critically ill patients.