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Case Reports
. 1996 Jun-Jul;17(6):1148-50.

Posttraumatic epistaxis from injury to the pterygovaginal artery

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Case Reports

Posttraumatic epistaxis from injury to the pterygovaginal artery

N M Borden et al. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 1996 Jun-Jul.

Abstract

Facial and skull base trauma can cause clinically significant epistaxis. Optimal evaluation and treatment require knowledge of the pertinent vascular and skull base anatomy. We describe a patient with extensive skull base injury and epistaxis in whom CT revealed a fracture through the roof of the nasopharynx and arteriography showed injury to the pterygovaginal (pharyngeal) artery. The fracture was successfully treated with transarterial particulate embolization.

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