Carotid stenosis: Difference between revisions

(Expand with concise EM-focused content: clinical features, evaluation, medical and surgical management)
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==Background==
==Background==
*Among pts who suffer [[stroke]], 50-75% could have been treated with endarterectomy<ref>Haqqani O et al. Carotid Endarterectomy. eMedicine. Dec 9, 2014. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1895291-overview#showall.</ref>
*Narrowing of internal carotid artery, usually from atherosclerotic plaque
*Responsible for 10-20% of ischemic [[stroke|strokes]] and [[TIA|TIAs]]
*Risk factors: [[hypertension]], [[diabetes]], smoking, [[hyperlipidemia]], age >65


==Carotid Endarterectomy==
==Clinical Features==
*Indicated in symptomatic pts fulfilling the following:
*Often asymptomatic until [[stroke]] or [[TIA]] occurs
**<6% surgical morbidity/mortality
*'''Symptomatic carotid stenosis:'''
**≥1 TIA(s) in past 6 months
**Anterior circulation TIA or stroke (ipsilateral to stenosis)
**Carotid artery stenosis > 50%
**[[Amaurosis fugax]] (transient monocular vision loss) — classic for carotid disease
*Indicated in asymptomatic pts with:
**Hemispheric symptoms: contralateral [[weakness]], [[numbness]], [[aphasia]]
**<3% surgical morbidity/mortality
*Carotid bruit on exam (low sensitivity and specificity — absence does NOT rule out stenosis)
**Carotid artery stenosis > 60%


==Sources==
==Evaluation==
*Carotid duplex ultrasound — first-line screening study
*CT angiography (CTA) or MR angiography (MRA) for definitive assessment
*Standard stroke workup if presenting with TIA/stroke: [[CT]] head, [[ECG]], labs
*Screen for concurrent coronary artery disease (high comorbidity)
 
==Management==
===Medical Therapy (All Patients)===
*[[Antiplatelet therapy]]: aspirin or clopidogrel
*[[Statin]] therapy (high-intensity)
*Blood pressure control, [[diabetes]] management, smoking cessation
 
===Surgical/Interventional===
*'''Carotid endarterectomy (CEA):'''
**Symptomatic stenosis ≥50-70%: Strong benefit from CEA (NNT ~6 for 70-99%)
**Asymptomatic stenosis ≥60-80%: Modest benefit in select patients with good surgical risk
**Should be performed within 2 weeks of index event for maximal benefit
*'''Carotid artery stenting (CAS):''' Alternative for high surgical risk patients
*'''Near-occlusion or complete occlusion:''' Medical management preferred (surgery not beneficial)
 
==Disposition==
*New symptomatic carotid stenosis (TIA/stroke) — admit for stroke workup, expedited surgical evaluation
*Incidental asymptomatic stenosis — outpatient vascular surgery referral
 
==See Also==
*[[Stroke]]
*[[TIA]]
*[[Amaurosis fugax]]
*[[Carotid artery dissection]]
 
==References==
<references/>
<references/>


[[Category:Neurology]]
[[Category:Neurology]]
[[Category:Vascular]]

Latest revision as of 01:14, 21 March 2026

Background

Clinical Features

  • Often asymptomatic until stroke or TIA occurs
  • Symptomatic carotid stenosis:
    • Anterior circulation TIA or stroke (ipsilateral to stenosis)
    • Amaurosis fugax (transient monocular vision loss) — classic for carotid disease
    • Hemispheric symptoms: contralateral weakness, numbness, aphasia
  • Carotid bruit on exam (low sensitivity and specificity — absence does NOT rule out stenosis)

Evaluation

  • Carotid duplex ultrasound — first-line screening study
  • CT angiography (CTA) or MR angiography (MRA) for definitive assessment
  • Standard stroke workup if presenting with TIA/stroke: CT head, ECG, labs
  • Screen for concurrent coronary artery disease (high comorbidity)

Management

Medical Therapy (All Patients)

Surgical/Interventional

  • Carotid endarterectomy (CEA):
    • Symptomatic stenosis ≥50-70%: Strong benefit from CEA (NNT ~6 for 70-99%)
    • Asymptomatic stenosis ≥60-80%: Modest benefit in select patients with good surgical risk
    • Should be performed within 2 weeks of index event for maximal benefit
  • Carotid artery stenting (CAS): Alternative for high surgical risk patients
  • Near-occlusion or complete occlusion: Medical management preferred (surgery not beneficial)

Disposition

  • New symptomatic carotid stenosis (TIA/stroke) — admit for stroke workup, expedited surgical evaluation
  • Incidental asymptomatic stenosis — outpatient vascular surgery referral

See Also

References