The incidence of stroke or transient ischemic attacks (TIA) in atrial fibrillation (AF) catheter ablation procedures is around 1% and may be unnoted under anesthesia. The artery of Percheron (AOP) infarction is a rare kind of stroke with heterogeneity in manifestation, which further makes the perioperative early detection and diagnosis a challenge. Herein, we present one patient who underwent AF ablation and presented mental status alteration after withdrawing anesthetics. An emergency head CT was obtained, which revealed no apparent pathological changes. A late MRI test confirmed the diagnosis of AOP infarction. With oral anticoagulants and rehabilitation therapies, the patient's awareness improved and fully recovered on the sixth-month follow-up. Variability in manifestation, no positive radiological finding on initial CT, and a low incidence has made few clinicians to gain much experience with this type of infarct, which delays the diagnosis and initiation of appropriate treatment.
Keywords: artery of Percheron; atrial fibrillation; catheter ablation; complication; stroke.
Copyright © 2022 Xie, Wang, Yu, Zhou, Shi, Zhou, Wu, Chen, Zhang, Li and Yang.