Aimee Lloyd, Sunila Jain, Diana Duke, Somenath Chatterjee, Bahauddin Ibrahim
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Persistent Trigeminal Artery Causing an Abducens Nerve Palsy: A Case Report.
We present a case of a 50-year-old female who was diagnosed with an isolated right abducens nerve palsy and was found to have a persistent trigeminal artery (PTA). The trigeminal artery is the most common persistent embryological carotid-vertebrobasilar anastomosis. A PTA can be picked up as an incidental finding on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or angiography. It has been reported that a PTA can be found in 0.1 to 0.6% of all cerebral angiograms. PTA has been linked to several rare abnormalities such as vascular aneurysms and cranial nerve compression. Our patient presented with diplopia and was found to have a paresis of the right lateral rectus muscle consistent with a right abducens nerve palsy. MRI found a right-sided PTA indenting the ventral surface of the pons. This case investigates and highlights that neurovascular compression from a PTA can cause an isolated abducens nerve palsy. Further research is required to investigate if surgical intervention for non-aneurysmal PTA would be beneficial for patients.