Posterior Meningeal Artery Origin Patterns among 300 Cases and Their Clinical Importance.
Objective: The posterior meningeal artery (PMA) is known as a dura mater-nourishing vessel. We encountered a patient with Wallenberg syndrome during transarterial embolization of the PMA associated with the dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF).
Methods: After development of Wallenberg syndrome in the patient, we assessed origins of the PMA patterns in 300 cases and divided them into 3 types. Methods: A 63-year-old man was incidentally diagnosed as having transverse-sigmoid sinus DAVF with a cortical venous reflux. During the transarterial embolization, the patient complained of vertigo and numbness of the right extremities. Postoperatively, the patient exhibited Wallenberg syndrome. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging showed a high-intensity area on the lateral side of the right medulla.
Conclusions: While performing arterial embolization of the PMA that directly originates from the intracranial vertebral artery, the possibility of deficient brainstem nourishment must be considered.