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Anatomic and Hemodynamic Correlations in Carotid Artery Stenosis

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TLDR
Angiograms in general mimicked the gross appearance of the plaques and predicted the actual degree of stenosis produced but did not identify many diaphragm defects, ulcerations, or small thrombi.
Abstract
Pressures were measured in the carotid arteries of 61 patients proximal and distal to atherosclerotic plaques which were carefully studied by angiography and anatomical dissection. (1) An atherosclerotic plaque causing a constriction of less than 47% luminal diameter leaving a lumen greater than 3.0 mm in diameter never caused pressure drops of greater than 10 mm Hg. Stenoses of greater than 63% luminal diameter leaving lumens less than 1.0 mm in diameter always caused pressure drops. (2) Atherosclerotic plaques producing defects which narrowed the lumen fell into a distinct pattern: (a) Type 1 lesions—This basic lesion filled the bulb of the internal carotid artery near its origin, causing a 1 to 2 cm smooth elliptical encroachment on the lumen. (b) Type 2 lesions—Short localized areas of thickening in addition to the basic lesion caused bar-like defects of the lumen at the origin of the internal carotid artery or near the distal end of the lesion. (c) Type 3 lesions—Multiple bar-like defects were sometimes seen. (d) Type 4 lesions—The areas of increased thickening of the lesion were sometimes quite narrow, producing diaphragm-like defects on the lumen. Although theoretically these various types of stenoses should produce different hemodynamic changes, insufficient numbers of observations were made to corroborate these presumptions. (3) Angiograms in general mimicked the gross appearance of the plaques and predicted the actual degree of stenosis produced but did not identify many diaphragm defects, ulcerations, or small thrombi.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship Between Blood Pressure and Stroke Risk in Patients With Symptomatic Carotid Occlusive Disease

TL;DR: The risk of stroke increases with blood pressure in the great majority of patients with symptomatic carotid artery disease, but the relationship is less steep than in other patients with TIA or stroke.
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Low risk of ischemic stroke in patients with reduced internal carotid artery lumen diameter distal to severe symptomatic carotid stenosis: cerebral protection due to low poststenotic flow? On behalf of the European Carotid Surgery Trialists' Collaborative Group.

TL;DR: Poststenotic narrowing of the ICA was associated with a low risk of stroke on medical treatment, suggesting that low flow alone is not usually sufficient to cause ischemic stroke distal to symptomatic carotid stenosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Differences in Carotid Bifurcation Anatomy and the Distribution of Atherosclerotic Plaque

Ursula G. Schulz, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2001 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied 5395 angiograms from the European Carotid Surgery Trial and found that carotid plaque formation at arterial bifurcations depends on vessel anatomy, particularly the relative sizes of the branches, and the ratio of the outflow to inflow area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Major Variation in Carotid Bifurcation Anatomy: A Possible Risk Factor for Plaque Development?

Ursula G. Schulz, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2001 - 
TL;DR: Large interindividual differences in carotid bifurcation anatomy are found and the potential importance of anatomic variation as a risk factor for atheroma is highlighted and provided a firm basis for flow modeling studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multicenter validation study of real-time (B-mode) ultrasound, arteriography, and pathologic examination

TL;DR: Although ultrasound imaging alone has limited usefulness in quantitating luminal stenosis, this can be improved by the use of Doppler spectral analysis and oculoplethysmography, and Ultrasound is superior to angiography for quantifying atherosclerotic plaque (lesion width) and will be an important tool for further study of atherosclerosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hemodynamic effects of arterial stenosis.

May Ag, +2 more
- 01 Apr 1963 - 
Journal Article

Critical arterial stenosis.

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Studies on carotid artery flow and pressure. Observations in 18 patients during graded occlusion of proximal carotid artery.

TL;DR: It has been found that patients with a considerable reduction in pressure, e.g., 60 per cent or greater, require a longer period for closure of the clamp and are more likely to have a neurologic complication as a result of ligation than patients with less reduction in Pressure.
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