Case 16 - CEA Flashcards
what are indications for CEA?
- symptomatic patients with >70% luminal narrowing of carotid artery
- symptoms = TIA, reversible ischemic neurologic deficit, nondisabling stroke
- asymptomatic pts with significant luminal narrow if risk of periop morbidity and mortality is low
what are the most serious periop complicaitons associated with CEA?
Neurologic and Cardiac complications
Neurologic
- include cerebral infarction, TIA, congnitive dysfunction
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etiology -
- emobolization of thrombus or air during surgical manipulation
- decreased cerebral perfusion during temporary carotid artery occlusion
- Poor collateral flow
Cardiac
- include MI, arrythmia, hypotension, HTN
- patients with carotid artery stenosis also have CAD
Intraop during CEA, how is patient’s neurologic status monitored?
1) regional anesthesia (awake patient)
- intermittent eval of motor, sensation, and language
-
usually done during high-risk periods
- carotid artery manipulaiton, arterial occlusion, and reperfusion
2) EEG
- considered gold standard
-
ischemia = decreased amplitude, decreased frequency, or burst suppression
- should see unilateral changes in regions dependent on operative artery
3) SSEPs
- stimulate peripheral nerve to cortex signal
- ischemia = increase latency, decrease amplittude
4) MEPs
* stimulate motor cotex, signal at peripheral nerve
5) TCD
- middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity on ipsilateral side
- sensitive for detecting embolic material
how can neurologic injury occur with CEA?
Neurologic injury
- arterial embolizatoin during surgical manipulation
- due to plaques of cartoid artery
- due to shunt placed (plaque or air)
- decreased cerebral perfusion during arterial occlusion
- poor collateral circulation
- hypotension during this period
- reperfusion injury
- unintential arterial occlusion after surgery
what interventions may reduce risk of neurologic injury in CEA cases?
1) induced HTN during artery occlusion
- during temporary artery occlusion, increase BP to promote collateral flow
- increase 10-20% above baseline
- phenylephrine
2) temporary shunt placed by surgeon
* at risk for plaque or air embolus
3) normotension during reperfusion
4) rapid emergence
- facilitates neuroexam at end of surgery
- allows for more rapid intervention like reexploration, cerbral thrombolysis, or angioplasty if indicated
5) controversies: hypothermia, anesthetic agents, paCo2
how can carotid artery angioplasty and CEA affect postop blood pressure instability?
Baroreceptor = carotid sinus
Carotid artery angioplasty
- alter carotid wall mechanical properties
- increase baroreceptor sensitivity
-
result = hypotension and bradycardia
- due to heightened barorecptor responsiveness
- tx = phenylephrine and atropine
CEA
- transection of carotid sinus
- no baroreceptor reflex
- result = HTN
-
Tx = BB, CCB, peripheral vasodilators
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