Safety of carotid artery surgery depends on proper case selection, meticulous surgical technique, and appropriate protection of the brain during carotid artery cross‐clamping. Various methods have been devised to determine the adequacy of collateral circulation, none of which has been proven practical and totally reliable. Attempts at increasing cerebral perfusion to the ischemic portion of the brain by induced hypertension, hypercarbia, and hypocarbia have been ineffective.
The purpose of this presentation is to report our experience with routine intraluminal shunting in carotid artery surgery during the past 17 years. Advantages of routine shunting include maintenance of regional cerebral blood flow at the preclamping level and the elimination of any need for monitoring and haste during surgery. Insertion of the tube, properly done, does not injure the arterial wall and should not cause embolization. The presence of the tube within the arterial lumen does not interfere with exposure of the atheroma, yet it facilitates repair of the incision and prevents stricture by faulty suturing technique. Results of carotid artery surgery measured by the incidence of stroke are compared between shunted and nonshunted series. A review of the literature confirms our impression that shunting reverses ischemic changes detected by EEG and regional cerebral blood flow determinations. The usefulness of shunting in the surgical management of internal carotid aneurysm, kinked carotid artery, carotid body tumor, and carotid‐subclavian bypass graft is also described.
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