Use of ultrasound contrast in the diagnosis of carotid artery occlusion. (73/2869)

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the use of an echo-enhancing agent in patients with carotid artery occlusion to improve the sensitivity and specificity of carotid color flow ultrasonography. METHOD: Between January 1997 and December 1998, a prospective study involving 85 cases of carotid artery occlusion in 84 patients was carried out. After a baseline duplex ultrasonography (DU) diagnosis, a second (DU) along with an echo-enhancement agent (SHU-508-A [Levovist]) study was carried out (echo enhancement ultrasonography diagnosis [DUEE]). In 82 cases, a contrast angiography was performed to confirm the diagnosis, whereas in the other three cases the diagnoses were confirmed with surgery. RESULTS: From the 85 internal carotid artery occlusions diagnosed at the initial DU examination, seven came out to be false occlusions in the DUEE examination (8,2%). There was a 100% correlation of the cases between the DUEE examination and the contrast angiography in the 82 cases in which this had been done. In three of the cases, the diagnosis was confirmed surgically because these displayed severe stenoses according to the DUEE studies in symptomatic patients, and so they required urgent treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The DUEE study is a potent diagnosis tool that allows the differentiation between true carotid artery occlusions and pseudo-occlusions.  (+info)

Baroreflex failure syndrome after bilateral excision of carotid body tumors: an underestimated problem. (74/2869)

Carotid body tumors (CBTs) are relatively rare paragangliomas that develop from neural crest cells at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery. They are generally slow growing and benign. Excision is currently considered the treatment of choice, although vascular and especially neural injuries are still relatively frequent in patients with large or bilaterally resected tumors. The baroreflex failure syndrome (BFS) has recently been identified as a severe, rarely recognized, and certainly underestimated complication after the bilateral excision of CBTs. The present report describes a case of a bilateral CBT followed by BFS and reviews the experiences reported in the literature. In light of the low incidence of malignancy of these tumors, their biologic behavior, their very high rate of cranial nerve palsy, and the occurrence of BFS in bilaterally resected paragangliomas, the current practice of bilaterally removing these tumors is questioned.  (+info)

Viscoelastic properties of normal and atherosclerotic carotid arteries. (75/2869)

BACKGROUND: remodelling of the arterial wall occurs with ageing, even in the absence of atherosclerotic risk factors. With increasing age, arteries dilate, thicken, and get stiffer. The aim of this study was to correlate carotid artery stiffness with wall thickness and plaque presence between healthy individuals and patients with early and advanced atherosclerosis. METHODS: twenty healthy volunteers, 40 carotid segments and 90 patients, 174 carotid segments, with vascular disease were included in the study. The carotid artery was imaged longitudinally and measurements of the intimal-medial thickness (IMT) and plaque were obtained. Systolic and diastolic blood pressures were taken from each arm. The carotid artery stiffness (pressure-strain elastic modulus, Ep) was calculated in all sites from the changes in pressure and diameter. M-mode was used to detect the diameter change (systolic to diastolic) over five cardiac cycles. RESULTS: in the healthy volunteers there was no evidence of plaque or increased IMT. The mean IMT was significantly higher in the patients compared to control (0.83+/-0.27 mm vs. 0.54+/-0.08 mm, p <0.0001). The IMT had a poor correlation with Ep at lower thickness (r=0.24, p=0.08) but this association became stronger with increasing thickness (r=0.62, p<0.001). Arterial segments with an IMT 5 0.88 mm became significantly stiffer compared to the controls (p<0.001) and to patients with an IMT<0.88 mm (p <0.01). Carotid Ep was markedly greater in arterial segments with plaques than in those with increased IMT (p <0.001) and the controls (p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: carotid wall areas with small increase in IMT have a poor correlation with carotid artery stiffness. The carotid stiffness increases in areas with marked wall thickening and particularly in segments with plaque. The simultaneous study of vessel-wall elastic behaviour with IMT and plaque changes may increase our understanding of atherosclerotic progression and wall remodelling.  (+info)

Acute carotid occlusion alters the activation flow coupling response to forepaw stimulation in a rat model. (76/2869)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To determine whether the hemodynamic response to functional stimulation is sensitive to proximal arterial occlusion, we measured the activation flow coupling response in a rat model of acute reversible vascular occlusion. METHODS: In alpha-chloralose-anesthetized rats (n=18), laser Doppler measurements were made through a thinned skull over the somatosensory cortex in response to electrical forepaw stimulation. Signal-averaged responses to 4 and 8 seconds of electrical forepaw stimulation were obtained before, during, and shortly after acute unilateral or bilateral carotid occlusion produced with the use of a surgically placed snare. RESULTS: Baseline cerebral blood flow was significantly decreased over the forepaw region of the somatosensory cortex after both occlusion of the carotid contralateral to the stimulated forepaw and bilateral occlusion compared with preocclusion (P<0.05). Postocclusion and ipsilateral occlusion led to a nonsignificant increase in baseline cerebral blood flow compared with preocclusion. Contralateral carotid occlusion and bilateral occlusion significantly prolonged the temporal characteristics of the flow response, especially the delay to peak (P<0.05), compared with preocclusion, whereas ipsilateral carotid occlusion significantly shortened the delay to peak (P<0.05). Only contralateral carotid occlusion produced a significant reduction in the peak amplitude of the flow response compared with preocclusion (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that temporal characteristics of functional activation responses are sensitive to alterations in the proximal arterial supply and, conversely, that functional activation studies must be interpreted with consideration of proximal arterial disease.  (+info)

Regional cerebral blood flow after cortical impact injury complicated by a secondary insult in rats. (77/2869)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Traumatic injury makes the brain susceptible to secondary insults. An uncomplicated mild lateral cortical impact injury (3 m/s, 2.5-mm deformation) that causes little or no permanent sequelae results in a large contusion at the impact site when the traumatic injury is complicated by a secondary insult, such as 40 minutes of bilateral carotid occlusion. METHODS: To determine whether the increased sensitivity to secondary insults in this model is caused by a vascular mechanism, cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured with (14)C-isopropyliodoamphetamine quantitative autoradiography, and brain tissue PO(2) (PbtO(2)) was measured at the impact site and in the contralateral parietal cortex. RESULTS: In animals that underwent bilateral carotid occlusion 1 hour after the impact injury, CBF and PbtO(2) were lower at the impact site than they were in animals that had either the impact injury or the carotid occlusion alone. In the immediate area of the impact, CBF was 14+/-6 mL. 100 g(-1). min(-1) in the animals with the impact injury followed by carotid occlusion compared with 53+/-24 mL. 100 g(-1). min(-1) in the animals with the impact injury alone and 74+/-14 mL. 100 g(-1). min(-1) in the animals with the carotid occlusion alone (P<0.001). At the time of this very low CBF value in the animals with the carotid occlusion after the impact injury, PbtO(2) at the impact site averaged 1.3+/-1.6 mm Hg and was <3 mm Hg in 5 of the 6 animals. In contrast, PbtO(2) in the animals with the impact injury alone averaged 9.3+/-2.9 mm Hg, and none of the animals had a PbtO(2) of <3 mm Hg (P=0.008). CONCLUSIONS: The CBF and PbtO(2) findings in this model suggest that the reduced CBF after traumatic injury predisposes the brain to secondary insults and results in ischemia when confronted with a reduction in cerebral perfusion pressure.  (+info)

No association between dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and development of atherosclerosis in a prospective population study (Bruneck Study). (78/2869)

Antiatherogenic properties of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) have been postulated for >40 years. Large-scale epidemiological studies on this important issue, however, are still sparse, and those available have yielded contradictory results. The Bruneck Study involved a large random sample of men and women aged 40 to 79 years that were enrolled in 1990 and reevaluated 5 years later. Baseline DHEA sulfate (DHEAS) levels were measured in 867 subjects after an overnight fast. Development and progression of carotid atherosclerosis was monitored by high-resolution duplex ultrasound. DHEAS levels declined with advancing age (29% and 44% per decade in men and women) and showed a complex sex-specific association with various vascular risk attributes and factors conferring protection against atherosclerosis. Age- and sex-adjusted DHEAS baseline levels did not differ between subjects with or without incident/progressive atherosclerosis (geometric mean 1161 versus 1253 microg/L). After adjustment for vascular risk factors and potential confounders, the odds ratio of incident/progressive atherosclerosis comparing a 50% increase in DHEAS levels was 0.99 (95% CI 0.89 to 1.11). Lack of an association between DHEAS and atherogenesis was confirmed in sex-specific and a variety of supplementary analyses. Statistical power would be high enough to detect differences in DHEAS between outcome categories as low as 15% (alpha=0.05). This prospective community-based study does not support a role for endogenous DHEA(S) in the development of human atherosclerosis.  (+info)

Occlusion of experimentally created fusiform aneurysms with porous metallic stents. (79/2869)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Carotid fusiform aneurysms are most commonly treated with occlusion of the parent vessel. The purpose of our study was to assess the effectiveness of self-expanding, cobalt-alloy stents in the ablation of experimental fusiform aneurysms with preservation of the parent vessel in a carotid artery model. METHODS: Porous metallic stents were placed endovascularly along the lengths of experimentally created fusiform aneurysms in the carotid arteries of dogs; aneurysms were also created in the animals' opposite carotid arteries to serve as controls. RESULTS: Before stent placement, angiography of the carotid arteries showed large fusiform aneurysms along the lengths of the common carotid arteries and complex patterns of flow. Immediately after stent placement there was disruption of the usual flow patterns within the lumens of the fusiform aneurysms. The lumen between the wall of the aneurysm and stented carotid showed stasis of contrast material and blood. Near-complete ablation of all aneurysms was observed 8 weeks after stent placement. The stented carotid arteries remained widely patent; control aneurysms and carotid arteries were patent and unchanged. Histopathologic analysis revealed fibrotic reactive scar tissue filling the space between the stent wires and outer wall of the fusiform aneurysm. CONCLUSION: Changing blood flow dynamics within an aneurysm can promote thrombus formation. The stent promotes stasis and thrombus within the residual lumen between the stent wall and the outer wall of the aneurysm because its woven wire mesh interferes with usual blood flow patterns, which then promotes formation of thrombus and fibrosis within the residual aneurysmal lumen.  (+info)

Endovascular treatment of a ruptured paraclinoid aneurysm of the carotid syphon achieved using endovascular stent and endosaccular coil placement. (80/2869)

We herein report a case of a ruptured superior hypophyseal aneurysm of the left supraclinoid carotid artery that could not be treated with a Guglielmi detachable coil (GDC), even in combination with a supporting nondetachable balloon. After an unsuccessful attempt at surgical clipping, treatment consisted of the placement of a stent over the neck of the aneurysm, advancement of a microcatheter through the stent mesh, and endosaccular embolization with a GDC. The late clinical outcome was excellent.  (+info)