The

n e w e ng l a n d j o u r na l

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images in clinical medicine Lindsey R. Baden, M.D., Editor

Cervical Aortic Arch

Tarun W. Dasari, M.D., M.P.H. Marco Paliotta, M.D. University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Oklahoma City, OK [email protected]

A

healthy 23-year-old woman was referred to our cardiology clinic for evaluation of a murmur and an increasingly pulsatile neck mass (Video), first noted 2 years before presentation. Physical examination revealed a prominent pulsation in the right side of the neck and an early diastolic murmur, grade 2/6, in the aortic position. Her blood pressure was 134/78 mm Hg in the right arm and 122/72 mm Hg in the left arm. No radial–radial or radial–femoral delay was appreciated. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed a bicuspid aortic valve with mild aortic regurgitation. Computed tomographic angiography (reconstructed image) revealed a cervical aortic arch with the left common carotid artery arising from the ascending portion (arrow 1) and the left subclavian artery arising from the descending aorta (arrow 2). Embryologically, this anomaly has been considered to result either from regression of the fourth aortic arch (with persistence of the third) or from the failure of normal caudal descent of the aortic arch system. The patient underwent reconstruction of the cervical arch, with adjustment to an intrathoracic position. She was doing well at follow-up 18 months after surgery.

DOI: 10.1056/NEJMicm1400771 Copyright © 2014 Massachusetts Medical Society.

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n engl j med 371;26

nejm.org

december 25, 2014

The New England Journal of Medicine Downloaded from nejm.org on December 29, 2014. For personal use only. No other uses without permission. Copyright © 2014 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.

Images in clinical medicine. Cervical aortic arch.

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