Topic 5 - Extra cranial cerebral vessels and sub clavian Flashcards
What are the two main reasons patients are referred or a carotid ultrasound?
• To find a cause of TIA, stroke or amaurosis fugax when symptoms have already occurred.
• To find patients with stenosis who require endarterectomy or stenting before symptoms have occurred.
These patients are usually at high risk of carotid disease because of underlying cardiovascular risk factors or the presence of a bruit.
What questions should you ask patients who attend for a carotid ultrasound who have symptoms?
• Have symptoms of numbness, tingling or weakness been experienced? If so, which side was affected and which part of the body?
• Has any visual disturbance been experienced? If so, which side was affected?
• Has speech been affected?
• Has vertigo occurred?
• Has memory been affected?
For any of the above, determine approximately
• how long the symptoms lasted
• how long since the symptoms occurred
• were multiple episodes of symptoms experienced (including duration and time between episodes).
What questions should you ask patients who attend for a carotid ultrasound who do not have symptoms?
- A general indication of the type of risk factor is sufficient.
- Patients who are going to surgery for atherosclerosis in other arteries are often referred for carotid studies because of the association of atherosclerosis in multiple circulations.
- This is especially relevant for the patients undergoing coronary bypass surgery as there is a strong association between coronary and carotid disease.
What are the three questions that need answering in a cerebrovascular ultrasound?
- Which artery is the atheroma located in? (identifying carotid arteries)
- What type of atheroma (or other pathology) is present? (Plaque characterisation)
- How tightly does the disease narrow the artery? ( Degree of stenosis)
How can you use the spectral waveform to assist in identifying the ECA?
ECA has a much steeper upstroke phase in systole and lower diastolic velocity when compared to the ICA but this is not always true. A temporal tap can also be elicited in the ECA however this is also true of the proximal ICA.
Why is plaque characterisation used as a predictor of those who may be at high risk of TIA or stroke.
If the patient develops a high degree of stenosis, then the need for intervention is indicated.
However, not all patients with a high degree of stenosis will develop symptoms and patients with lesser degrees of stenosis may also experience symptoms.
What are the two plaque characteristics that are assessed?
- Plaque echogenicity
2. Surface characteristics
What does a low echogenic plaque indicate?
Less echogenic than the surrounding muscle or absent B-mode texture (echolucent) with a thin fibrous cap.
This indicates a significant lipid core or haemorrhage which makes them more vulnerable to rupture and causing symptoms
What does moderate echogenicity plaque indicate?
Less echogenic or equal echogenicity compared to surrounding muscle but less echogenic than the adventitia. This plaque relates to a greater content of collagen and fibrin.
How are plaques with strong echogenicity described?
Greater echogenicity than the surrounding tissue and may show shadowing from calcification
How are homogenous plaques described?
Plaque is uniform in echo texture and may be echolucent or echogenic. Plaque with echolucent regions are considered at higher risk of symptoms than plaque with calcified regions.
What causes heterogeneous plaque?
Plaque contains various levels of echogenicity which may represent highly echogenic calcification or echolucent regions which may represent plaque haemorrhage.
What is he significance of irregular plaque?
may represent the presence of ulceration
but can also indicate adjacent plaque formations
or an irregular plaque which is not ulcerated.
It is difficult and unreliable to confirm the presence of ulceration but in some cases the focal irregularity of a plaque is worth highlighting.
Why is calculating the degree of stenosis important?
The degree of stenosis has the strongest relationship to the incidence of symptoms and increasing degrees of stenosis increase the risk of significant stroke
• The European Carotid Surgery Trial (ECST) and the North America Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) show?
that symptomatic patients with greater than 80% and 70% stenosis respectively will have a clear benefit from surgical endarterectomy.
What did the ACAS study show?
• For patients without symptoms, has suggested benefit from surgery in patients with stenosis of greater than 60%
When a lesion is not haemodynamically significant how is plaque graded?
Real-time imaging
• when blood flow velocities are less than 125 em/sec, then the percentage lumen diameter narrowing is subjectively estimated
• Although cross-sectional imaging in the transverse plane may offer better delineation of asymmetric and eccentric plaques, the physics of ultrasound make it difficult to resolve the edges of the more lateral aspects of the artery.
• Sizing of carotid plaque can be performed either by measuring the height or amount of thickening of the wall rather than by determining the residual lumen of the vessel.
• Direct measurements of plaque height (wall thickness) are now used for the evaluation of the response of atherosclerotic plaque to various therapies
What is the special criteria NASCET?
NASCET and and ECST studies used angiography to estimate stenosis
afterward a number of studies were published which determined Duplex criteria to identify stenosis of greater than 70% (NASCET) and 80% (ECST).
the NASCET method is most commonly used in Australia
What is the consensus criteria for normal carotid?
<125 psv
no bmode plaque
<40 EDV ICA
ICA/CCA psv <2
What is the consensus criteria for 50-69% stenosis carotid?
50-59 b mode
>125
>40 EDV
ICA/CCA 2-4
What is the consensus criteria for 70-89 % stenosis carotid?
70-89 b mode
>230 psv
>100 EDV
>4 ICA/CCA psv
What is important to remember about bmode versus spectral calculation of stenosis?
- spectral criteria are not considered valuable for lesions under 50%
- B-mode measurement will allow an estimate of the ‘burden’ of atheroma present.
- It is also considered that B-mode and colour estimates of stenosis above 50% are not accurate and velocity criteria should be used.