European Journal of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
Volume 40, Issue 4 , Pages 475-482, October 2010

Carotid Endarterectomy for Symptomatic, but “Haemodynamically Insignificant” Carotid Stenosis

  • R.M. Ahmed

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia
  • ,
  • J.P. Harris

      Affiliations

    • Department of Vascular Surgery, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
  • ,
  • C.S. Anderson

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia
    • George Institute of Global Health, Sydney, Australia
  • ,
  • V. Makeham

      Affiliations

    • Department of Vascular Surgery, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
  • ,
  • G.M. Halmagyi

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +61 2 9515 7565; fax: +61 2 9515 7564.

Received 9 March 2010; accepted 12 July 2010. published online 20 August 2010.

Abstract 

Objective

Carotid endarterectomy (CEA) guidelines in symptomatic carotid stenosis are based on NASCET and ECST criteria with 70% or greater carotid stenosis as estimated from a catheter angiogram the major indication. This has several problems: (1) lack of reliable correlation between non-invasive imaging and catheter angiography, which has been largely superseded by non-invasive imaging in investigating carotid stenosis; (2) errors inherent in estimating the degree of stenosis from catheter angiography; (3) disregard for the fact that stroke risk also depends on plaque stability, and number of ischaemic events.

Methods

A retrospective review of ischaemic events, imaging results, operative findings, surgical complications and stroke-free follow-up in 31 patients presenting over a 23 year period with TIA/stroke (symptoms lasting > 24 h and/or imaging evidence of infarction) who had 70% or less carotid stenosis (on non-invasive imaging), but nonetheless underwent CEA.

Results

Nineteen patients had small strokes, 7 had TIAs and 5 had ocular events; 28 patients had features of unstable plaque on imaging; 19 patients experienced multiple events before CEA. All had haemorrhagic, ruptured plaque at CEA. One patient suffered an intra-operative stroke, only 1 patient suffered a further stroke/TIA (mean follow-up 4.2 years).

Conclusion

To predict the likelihood of major stroke in symptomatic carotid stenosis and the benefit of CEA, plaque stability and the number of ischaemic events might be as important as an estimate of the degree of stenosis.

Keywords: Carotid endarterectomy, Insignificant stenosis, Plaque morphology

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PII: S1078-5884(10)00429-6

doi:10.1016/j.ejvs.2010.07.003

European Journal of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
Volume 40, Issue 4 , Pages 475-482, October 2010