Facial numbness and dysesthesia. New features of carotid artery dissection
K. R. Francis, D. P. Williams and B. T. Troost
Facial numbness and dysesthesia have not been emphasized as presenting
features in spontaneous internal carotid artery dissection. Progressive
facial pain, accompanied by oculosympathetic paresis, altered taste, and
facial numbness suggest the possibility of basal skull neoplasm. We
describe a patient, with previously undiscovered fibromuscular dysplasia,
who presented with severe neck and face pain, dysgeusia, oculosympathetic
paresis, and markedly reduced facial sensation due to a spontaneous
vascular dissection. Altered facial sensation should now be included in the
symptomatology of internal carotid artery dissection.