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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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Duplex ultrasonography and selection of patients for carotid endarterectomy: plaque morphology or luminal narrowing?

TL;DR: Percentage of carotid stenosis and plaque morphology as determined by duplex scanning were correlated with symptoms and CT evidence of infarction in 108 patients, and a heterogeneous plaque appearance, suggesting intraplaque hemorrhage, did correlate with ipsilateral cerebral symptoms.
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Lack of Correlation Between Pattern of Collateralization and Misery Perfusion in Patients With Carotid Occlusion

TL;DR: With the possible but infrequent exceptions of delayed venous phase and pial collateralization, anatomic findings made on routine angiographic studies of patients with carotid occlusion do not correlate with increased OEF.
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Color coded ultrasonic differential velocity arterial scanner (Echoflow)

TL;DR: The display of normal carotid bifurcations by normal colors in the Doppler scan is also reliable in 93% of cases but the display of slightly increased velocities may result from haemodynamic causes as often as from localized small stenoses.
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Borderzone hemodynamics in cerebrovascular disease.

TL;DR: There was no evidence for selective borderzone hemodynamic impairment in this group of patients with severe carotid artery disease and ratios of each borderzone to the ipsilateral MCA territory for both I% and rOEF.
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Characterisation of carotid artery disease: comparison of duplex scanning with histology

TL;DR: In this paper, the ability of duplex scanning to characterise the component tissue of atheromatous lesions of the internal carotid artery and to detect ulceration has been examined in a histological study of 42 Carotid endarterectomy specimens.
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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