It has been suggested that carotid endarterectomy for carotid bifurcation disease may be contraindicated in the presence of carotid siphon lesions. This study was undertaken to assess any difference in stroke rate, mortality, or relief of symptoms in patients with and without such "tandem" lesions following elective carotid endarterectomy. Ninety-one bifurcation endarterectomies were performed in 79 patients. The patients were divided into two groups. Group I (44 patients, 47 endarterectomies) had carotid bifurcation stenosis only; group I (35 patients, 44 endarterectomies) had siphon stenosis plus bifurcation stenosis. All patients in both groups who were symptomatic before operation were relieved of their symptoms. In group I there were no intraoperative or perioperative strokes, four late strokes (8.7%), one operate death (2.1%), and no late deaths. Group II patients had two intraoperative strokes (4.5%), three perioperative strokes (6.8%), two late strokes (5.1%), four operative deaths (9.1%), and three late deaths (7.5%). Eighteen of the 35 patients in group II had a greater degree of carotid siphon stenosis than bifurcation stenosis. In this subgroup, there was one operative stroke (5.6%), only perioperative stroke (5.6%), one late stroke (5.9%), one postoperative death (5.6%), and one late death (5.6%). None of these differences were statistically significant. Relief of symptoms was the same in patients with and without tandem carotid lesions, and there was no significantly increased risk of stroke or death following bifurcation endarterectomy in patients with tandem carotid lesions.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

carotid siphon
12
siphon stenosis
12
relief symptoms
12
carotid endarterectomy
12
group patients
12
bifurcation stenosis
12
carotid
10
patients
10
stroke rate
8
elective carotid
8

Similar Publications

Background: Severe vessel tortuosity may prevent a microcatheter from reaching a distal vessel. However, the double-wire technique (DWT) may facilitate the procedure. The present study evaluated the feasibility and safety of guiding a 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the transorbital approach (TO) for accessing vascular lesions, specifically the carotid and middle cerebral arteries, using cadaveric specimens to understand its feasibility for vascular clipping.
  • Dissection involved a stepwise TO method that included procedures like lateral orbital craniectomy and anterior clinoidectomy, allowing for exposure of various vascular segments and cranial nerves.
  • Findings suggest that the TO approach effectively exposes key artery segments, indicating its potential use in treating paraclinoid and posterior communicating aneurysms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Blister aneurysms of the internal carotid artery (ICA) are rare and are primarily documented in the literature through small series and case reports. The intraoperative observation of a hemorrhage in the artery wall proximal to the aneurysmal bulge led to the hypothesis that some of these aneurysms might develop in a retrograde manner.

Methods: We developed software to reconstruct the ICA with and without Type I and II blister aneurysms using patients' imagery as input to simulate hemodynamic conditions before and after their formation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Aspiration thrombectomy is one of the mainstays for stroke interventions. The Zoom 71 (Z71) aspiration catheter is unique with its angled tip. This study describes the orientation of the angled tip as it is navigated around the carotid siphon in relation to trackability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The ability of transcranial Doppler (TCD) to detect asymptomatic cerebrovascular disease among childhood brain tumor survivors following exposure to cranial radiation therapy has not been established.

Methods: Survivors of childhood brain tumors, more than 3 years since diagnosis and exposed to greater than 30 Gy cranial radiation, underwent a history and physical exam, laboratory biomarkers of cerebrovascular disease (cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL), high-sensitivity CRP, hemoglobin A1C, apoprotein A, and apoprotein B), and a TCD evaluation of their cerebral arteries.

Results: In all 165 cerebral arteries from 13 patients (medulloblastoma = 10; germ cell tumor = 3; females = 5; mean age at diagnosis = 8.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!