Carotid Artery Stenosis Flashcards
What are the risk factors for developing carotid artery stenosis?
Age
Male
Smoking
Hypertension
Diet
Sedentary lifestyle
Raised cholesterol
What are patients with carotid artery stenosis at risk of?
Very likely to have arterial disease and atherosclerosis elsewhere
Coronary artery disease
MI
How is carotid artery stenosis classified?
Mild Less than 50% reduction
Moderate 50-69% reduction in diameter
Severe 70% or more reduction
How does carotid artery stenosis present?
Usually asymptomatic, diagnosed after a TIA or stroke
Carotid bruit
Whooshing sound due to turbulent flow around stenotic area during systole
How is carotid artery stenosis diagnosed?
Carotid ultrasound
Initial investigation to diagnose and assess the stenosis
CT or MRI angiogram
Can be used to assess in more detail before surgery
How is carotid artery stenosis managed?
Modifiable risk factor reduction
- Healthy diet and exercise
- Stop smoking
- Managing co-morbidities
- Antiplatelet medications (aspirin, clopidogrel, ticagrelor)
- Lipid-lowering medications
Surgical intervention
What surgical intervention is used for carotid artery stenosis?
Carotid endarterectomy (first-line treatment for most patients)
Angioplasty and stenting
What are the risk factors of carotid artery stenosis?
- Airway compression during surgery due to bleeding
- Facial nerve injury
- Glossopharyngeal nerve (swallowing difficulties)
- Recurrent laryngeal nerve (hoarse voice)
- Hypoglossal nerve injury (unilateral tongue paralysis)
- Stroke, 2% risk
What happens in angioplasty and stenting?
Catheter inserted into femoral artery in the groin
Passed through aorta under x-ray guidance to the carotid artery
Balloon inflated to widen the lumen (angioplasty) stent left in place