As a cause of stroke, arterial dissections may happen at any age, but they are more common in the young population. Dissections are causes of approximately 20% of ischemic strokes in young adults. The annual incidence of spontaneous cervical artery dissections has been reported as 2.6 per 100000 in the USA. The mean age of patients was 44 to 46 years in North America and Europe. There is no clear gender or ethnic predominance in patients, but in some studies men were slightly more affected (
1,
2). Most dissections occur spontaneously or after minor or trivial injury to the head or neck. Spontaneous cervical artery dissection has been classified as vertebral artery dissection or internal carotid artery dissection (
3). Dissection has been reported in association with sports such as tennis (
4), volleyball (
5), basketball (
6), skating (
7), diving (
8), dancing (
9), trampoline use (
10), and yoga (
11). There are reports of arterial dissection immediately after swimming in a 60-year-old female (
12), and also following sea wave trauma to the neck in a 56-year-old man (
13). This report may be the first one of the spontaneous cervical arterial dissection in a young swimmer.