Angiology, cilt.48, sa.7, ss.659-62, 1997 (SCI-Expanded)
Cervical aortic arch is a rare type of aortic arch anomaly that is presumed to result from persistence of the third aortic arch and regression of the normal fourth arch. Most of the patients with this anomaly are asymptomatic: but symptoms of dysphagia and respiratory distress due to the compression by the vascular ring have been reported. Other findings such as a supraclavicular pulsatile mass, blood pressure discrepancies between the upper limbs, and loss of femoral or opposite-upper-limb pulses with compression of the cervical mass may also be present. In this article a twenty-two-year-old woman with symptomatic cervical aortic arch is presented. The patient had a left cervical pulsatile mass and elevated blood pressure on her right upper limb and was treated surgically with reanastomosis of the aorta.