Management of Carotid Artery stenosis Flashcards
What do with asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis that is >80% stenosed?
carotid endarterectomy
What do with asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis that is <80% stenosed?
medical management (aspirin, statin, antihypertensive medication)
What do with a symptomatic carotid artery stenosis that is >70% stenosed?
carotid endarterectomy
What do with a symptomatic carotid artery stenosis that is 50-69% stenosed?
male: carotid endarterectomy
female: medical management (ASA, statins, antihypertensives)
What to do with a symptomatic carotid artery stenosis that is <50% stenosed?
medical management (ASA, statin, anti hypertensives)
what should all patients with carotid artery atherosclerosis do?
stop smoking, get low dose aspirin, statin therapy and control of BP.
Which patients would not benefit from a carotid endarterectomy or CEA?
- poor surgical candidates due to medical comorbidities,
- life expectancy <5 yrs,
- have ipsilateral stroke with persistent -disabiling neurological deficits
AND ppl who have complete occlusion of internal carotid artery
What to do if person has complete 100% occlusion of internal carotid artery stenosis (regardless of symptomatic or asymptomatic)?
No benefit with carotid endarterectomy
In asymptomatic pts, complete occlusion of carotid artery typically indicates adequate collateral blood flow so unlikely to benefit from CEA.
who gets carotid artery stenting?
PPL who are poor surgical candidates but may get benefit for revascularization.
Higher periprocedural stroke and mortability.
Sometimes done in failed CEA