Selection of patients for carotid endarterectomy. (41/1701)

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was the definition of the duplex scan parameters that best select patients for carotid endarterectomy. METHODS: This study was set in a regional vascular unit. Duplex scanning and angiography were performed prospectively on 50 patients who were symptomatic (100 carotid bifurcation) to identify the most accurate and sensitive duplex scan criteria to identify an 80% to 99% stenosis according to the European Carotid Symptomatic Trial. With data from the European Carotid Symptomatic Trial, we estimated the effect of three different approaches used to select patients for carotid endarterectomy. The first approach was the selection of patients for carotid surgery on the basis of duplex scanning alone with the most accurate duplex scan criteria (approach I). The second approach was the selection of patients for carotid surgery on the basis of duplex scanning alone with a 100% sensitive duplex scan criteria (approach II). The third approach was the selection of patients for angiography with duplex scanning (100% sensitive criteria) and then the use of angiography to define which patients should undergo surgery (approach III). RESULTS: All three approaches appeared to have a similar potential in stroke reduction. However, approach I, which minimized the number of patients who underwent surgery (19% less than approach II) or invasive imaging (65% less than approach III), appeared to be the most appropriate. CONCLUSION: These data support the selection of patients for carotid endarterectomy on the basis of duplex scanning alone. The duplex scan criteria should be validated against angiography.  (+info)

Effects of lovastatin and warfarin on early carotid atherosclerosis: sex-specific analyses. Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Progression Study (ACAPS) Research Group. (42/1701)

BACKGROUND: Few clinical trials have documented the efficacy of preventive treatment in asymptomatic women. METHODS AND RESULTS: Lovastatin and minidose warfarin were evaluated in a factorially designed, placebo-controlled, randomized trial. The primary outcome was 3-year change in the mean maximum intimal-medial thickness of the carotid arteries as measured by B-mode ultrasonography. Participants (n=919) were randomized to 1 of 4 treatment groups: lovastatin alone, warfarin alone, lovastatin+warfarin combination, or a double-placebo group. Eligible participants were asymptomatic for cardiovascular disease, with evidence of early carotid atherosclerosis and moderately elevated LDL cholesterol level. Almost half (n=445) of the participants were women. To avoid confounding, 117 women taking estrogen were excluded from analysis. Both sexes experienced reductions in disease progression with lovastatin; there was no evidence of an overall sex x treatment interaction (P=0.72). When estimates of the sex-specific results were examined post hoc, women experienced disease regression to the greatest extent with the lovastatin + warfarin combination (P=0.02), although the women on lovastatin alone also had a reduction in progression (P=0.09). Men experienced the greatest reduction with lovastatin alone (P=0.02), although there is a suggestion that warfarin may also reduce progression to some extent. CONCLUSIONS: Lovastatin is beneficial in reducing disease progression in women and men. Warfarin has no effect in women, although it may reduce progression in men. In men, warfarin does not add to the benefit of lovastatin and has no advantage over lovastatin alone.  (+info)

Management of extracranial carotid artery aneurysms: 17 years' experience. (43/1701)

OBJECTIVES: a retrospective review of seventeen-year (1980-1996) experience of the management of extracranial carotid artery aneurysms. PATIENTS AND METHODS: sixty-six aneurysms of extracranial carotid artery were seen in 63 patients. The diagnosis was confirmed by angiography in 51 patients and duplex ultrasonography in twelve. Twenty-eight (42%) patients had an atherosclerotic aneurysm, twenty-two (33%) had false aneurysms secondary to trauma, nine were congenital and seven were mycotic. All underwent aneurysm resection with saphenous-vein-graft interposition as the most common means of reconstruction. RESULTS: one death occurred due to septicaemia in a diabetic patient with a mycotic aneurysm, giving an operative mortality of 1.5%. One patient had an immediate hemiparesis after carotid artery ligation, and three had a hemiparesis within 48 hours of operation (6.1%). After a change in technique to avoid a residual carotid stump, no further neurological problems were encountered in the following 28 patients. CONCLUSION: extracranial carotid aneurysms may be successfully managed with resection and reconstruction with autogenous saphenous vein. End-to-side anastomosis avoids a blind-ending stump which may be the source of emboli.  (+info)

Carotid artery diameter correlates with risk factors for cardiovascular disease in a population of 55-year-old subjects. (44/1701)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We investigated whether, in a randomly selected population of 55-year-old men and women, there is a relationship between common carotid artery (CCA) diameter and intima-media (IM) thickness and conventional risk factors for cardiovascular disease such as gender, smoking, elevated blood lipids, and high blood pressure. METHODS: CCA diameter and IM thickness of the distal right and left CCAs were measured by high-frequency ultrasound methods. Fifty-seven men (73% of the invited men) and 47 women (62% of the invited women) participated. RESULTS: In the whole group the CCA diameter was correlated with gender (P<0.001), cholesterol (P=0.007), triglycerides (P<0.001), apoB (P<0.001), apoB/A-1 (P<0.001), systolic blood pressure (P=0. 001), and glucose (P=0.006). HDL was inversely correlated with mean CCA diameter (P=0.003). In men the CCA diameter was correlated with a combined risk factor score (P=0.005), systolic blood pressure (P=0. 011), platelet count (P=0.033), apoB (P=0.025), and occurrence of plaque (P=0.003). In women the CCA diameter was correlated with a combined risk factor score (P=0.010), systolic blood pressure (P=0. 033), body mass index (P<0.001), cholesterol (P=0.009), triglycerides (P=0.14), apoB (P=0.002), and apoB/A1 (P=0.003). IM thickness was correlated with systolic blood pressure (P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: There are correlations between risk factors for cardiovascular disease and carotid artery diameter and IM thickness in both women and men in a population of 55-year-old subjects. The increased vessel diameter in subjects with cardiovascular risk factors may be a sign of attenuated vasoregulation, which could be an important factor during the development of atherosclerosis.  (+info)

Decreased transcranial Doppler carbon dioxide reactivity is associated with disordered cerebral metabolism in patients with internal carotid artery stenosis. (45/1701)

PURPOSE: The hemodynamic effect of stenosis of the internal carotid artery (ICA) can be assessed by measuring, with transcranial Doppler (TCD), the carbon dioxide (CO(2)) reactivity of the cerebral vessels. The aim of this study was to determine whether a decreased CO(2) reactivity is associated with a compromised cerebral metabolism, as evaluated with (1)H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). METHODS: Sixty-six patients with unilateral or bilateral stenosis of the ICA, who were scheduled for carotid endarterectomy (CEA) and who had undergone both a TCD CO(2) reactivity test and a MRS examination, were included in this study. The ICA stenosis on one side (CEA side) was always more than 70%, and the extent of the stenosis on the contralateral side varied. RESULTS: The CO(2) reactivity and the N-acetyl aspartate (NAA)/choline ratio were correlated in both hemispheres (r =.43; P <.001). Patients with an ICA occlusion contralateral to the CEA side are especially at risk for disordered cerebral hemodynamics and metabolism; in the contralateral hemisphere, the mean CO(2) reactivity and NAA/choline ratio were abnormal (18% and 1.52, respectively), and lactate was present in 85% of the patients. Changes indicative of disordered hemodynamics were found more often in symptomatic than in asymptomatic patients. CONCLUSION: A decreased CO(2) reactivity appears to be associated with a disordered cerebral metabolism. Patients with severe bilateral ICA stenosis are at risk for disordered cerebral metabolism and hemodynamics. Therefore, the indication for CEA based on the degree of ICA stenosis and clinical grounds might be refined with an additional test, such as the TCD CO(2) reactivity test.  (+info)

Intraoperative stenting of the internal carotid artery after unsuccessful eversion endarterectomy. (46/1701)

Stenting of the internal carotid artery (ICA) has been shown to be feasible in atherosclerotic lesions, in restenosis after carotid endarterectomy, and in spontaneous carotid dissections. To correct an intimal flap that detached distal occlusion of the ICA after eversion carotid endarterectomy, as shown with intraoperative completion angiography, we successfully used stenting of the ica with a self-expandable stainless steel stent placed during surgery through the common carotid artery.  (+info)

Mobile carotid plaques: the natural history of two asymptomatic and non-operated cases. (47/1701)

We studied two cases of mobile internal carotid artery lesions in symptom-free patients. Both cases were diagnosed by means of routine carotid duplex ultrasound scanning, and neither patient was operated on. With medical therapy with oral anticoagulants, the two lesions spontaneously disappeared without any clinical sequel, and no evidence of infarcts was shown by means of repeated computed tomography brain scans. After uneventful 2- and 3-year follow-up periods, there was no evidence of recurrence. This is the first published data on asymptomatic mobile carotid lesions and their natural history that shows a benign course in a long-term follow-up period. We suggest that a non-surgical approach may be considered selectively in high-risk symptom-free patients who have mobile and floating internal carotid artery lesions.  (+info)

Embolization of meningohypophyseal and inferolateral branches of the cavernous internal carotid artery. (48/1701)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Despite the continued improvements in endovascular techniques this decade, few dedicated studies addressing the feasibility of such procedures or their efficacy relative to risk have been conducted. The purpose of this study was to use current endovascular techniques to assess the feasibility, effectiveness, and safety of direct selective catheterization and embolization of the small branches of the cavernous segment of the internal carotid artery. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the findings in 10 patients with lesions (five meningiomas and five arteriovenous malformations) primarily or partly supplied by branches of the meningohypophyseal trunk or inferolateral trunk who had undergone endovascular embolization of the feeding arteries during the period from 1991 to 1997. In each case, the artery was selectively catheterized with a microcatheter/microguidewire system and embolized with polyvinyl alcohol particles (n = 5), n-butyl cyanoacrylate tissue adhesive (n = 4), or both (n = 1). RESULTS: In all 10 patients, the feeding artery from the meningohypophyseal trunk (eight patients) or inferolateral trunk (three patients; one patient with both) was successfully catheterized and embolized. In nine patients, embolization resulted in complete obliteration of the vascular territory; in the remaining patient, blood supply was decreased by an estimated 80%. No immediate or delayed complications occurred. CONCLUSION: Advances in microcatheter and microguidewire technology allow more efficient and safer selective catheterization and embolization of branches of the cavernous segment of the internal carotid artery than in the recent past. Meticulous technique and detailed knowledge of the vascular anatomy of the cavernous sinus region are necessary to maximize lesion devascularization and to minimize the risk of stroke, cranial nerve palsies, and blindness.  (+info)