CEA performed with routine EEG monitoring and selective shunt placement is associated with a low risk of perioperative stroke. Identified predictors of significant EEG changes were anatomic factors including degree of contralateral carotid artery disease and moderate ipsilateral carotid artery stenosis (50% to 79%). Although contralateral carotid occlusion has been accepted as indication for shunt placement in the absence of cerebral monitoring, this study suggests that high-grade contralateral disease and moderate ipsilateral carotid stenosis are associated with cerebral ischemia resulting in EEG changes and should prompt consideration for nonselective shunting.
Background
Carotid artery stenting (CAS) has grown as a possible alternative for the treatment of extracranial cerebrovascular disease in the past decade. A pre-existing contralateral carotid artery occlusion has been described as a risk factor for inferior outcomes following carotid endarterectomy (CEA), yet its impact on CAS outcomes is less understood.
Methods
Retrospective review of 417 CAS procedures from May 2001 through July 2010 at a single center using self-expanding nitinol stents and mechanical embolic protection devices. Patients were divided into those with a pre-existing contralateral carotid occlusion (Group A, n=39) versus those without a contralateral occlusion (Group B, n=378). Patient demographics and co-morbidities as well as 30-day and late death, stroke, and myocardial infarction (MI) rates were analyzed. Mean follow-up was 4.0 years (range 0–9.4 years).
Results
Overall mean age of the 314 men and 103 women was 70.5 years. In Group A there were 2 (5.1%) octogenarians and 9 patients (23.1%) with symptomatic disease as compared to Group B with 53 (14.0%) octogenarians and 121 (32.0%) patients with symptomatic disease. The overall 30-day death, stroke, and MI rates were 0.5%, 1.9%, and 0.7%. When comparing Group A to Group B these results were not significantly different: death (0% vs 0.5%), stroke (2.6% vs 1.9%), and MI (0% vs 0.8%). Long-term outcomes for Groups A and B were not significantly different: death (25.6% vs 22.2%), stroke (5.3% vs 3.4%), and MI (15.4% vs 14.0%) (p=NS).
Conclusion
A pre-existing contralateral carotid artery occlusion does not appear to adversely impact CAS outcomes.
Lifelong surveillance after EVAR is advocated because of the potential of delayed type I or III endoleaks, which mandate definitive treatment. Fortunately, most delayed type I and III endoleaks can be successfully corrected with endoluminal interventions rather than resorting to explantation of the endograft.
Intimal angiosarcomas are rare and difficult to diagnose preoperatively. Complete surgical resection is essential, but long-term survival is unlikely. We report a patient who presented with a contained ruptured infrarenal aorta with clinical and radiologic findings suggestive of infectious aortitis. Surgical resection, regional debridement, and reconstruction were completed using a cadaveric arterial homograft. However, pathologic evaluation revealed a high-grade intimal sarcoma.
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