European Journal of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
Volume 25, Issue 1 , Pages 60-67, January 2003

Carotid surgery in acute symptomatic patients

This paper was presented at EJVS 2000 in London.

Departments of 1Vascular Surgery and Kidney Transplantation, 2Neurology and 3Institute of Diagnostic Radiology, Heinrich Heine University, Düsseldorf

Accepted 28 August 2002.

*Please address all correspondence to: R. Huber, Klinik für Gefäβchirurgie und Nierentransplantation, Heinrich Heine Universität, D-40225 Düsseldorf.

Abstract 

Objectives: evaluation of urgent carotid artery surgery with new diagnostic techniques and changing surgical considerations at a university hospital. Design, material and methods: prospective monitoring and assessment of outcome in 67 patients who underwent urgent carotid surgery because of symptomatic extracranial carotid artery involvement. Patients were examined via the stroke unit: duplex sonography was mandatory for diagnosis of extracranial carotid artery disease, as was proof of an open middle cerebral artery (MCA). Assessment of intracerebral damage followed CT or MR imaging procedures. Perioperative and surgical management was standardized. Neurological impairment was assessed pre-, postoperatively and at follow-up using the Rankin scale. “Urgent” was defined as “immediate” after the final diagnostic step had been performed. Results: within a period of 26 months 67 symptomatic patients (58% stroke, 42% TIA) underwent urgent carotid surgery. Median time from admission to surgery was 2 days. In all but five cases flow through the ICA could technically be restored (93%). Thirty-day mortality was 3% and disease-related morbidity 13%. The one and two year survival rates were 92 and 90%, respectively. No ipsilateral recurrent stroke occurred during follow-up. Conclusions: clinical decision-making based on stratified diagnostic workup by means of extra- and intracranial as well as intracerebral hemodynamics using new imaging techniques may select patients who will benefit more from urgent surgery than from conservative management.

Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 25, 60–67 (2003)

Keywords:  Cerebral ischemia, Stroke, Stroke unit, Diagnostic criteria, Internal carotid artery reconstruction, Urgent carotid surgery

 

PII: S1078-5884(03)70187-7

doi:10.1053/ejvs.2002.1774

European Journal of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
Volume 25, Issue 1 , Pages 60-67, January 2003