2019
DOI: 10.1055/s-0039-3400478
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Carotid Body Baroreceptor Preservation and Control of Arterial Pressure in Eversion Carotid Endarterectomy

Abstract: The technique of the eversion carotid endarterectomy (ECEA), as an alternative to the conventional endarterectomy with primary or patch angioplasty, is an established technique for managing internal carotid artery stenoses and recently its application has been upgraded through the European Society for Vascular Surgery guidelines (Recommendation 55: Class 1, Level A). However, the typical eversion method has been associated with postoperative hypertension due to loss of the baroreceptor reflex; the standard obl… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Subsequently, the ICA was reanastomosed with running suture (polypropylene 6.0) to the central bifurcation, starting from the cephalad corner with small bites and with a second knot at the caudal corner; before the final closing knot, the anastomosis was “inflated” with blood; any bleeding points due to this action were sealed using isolated stitches with polypropylene 7.0. 7…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, the ICA was reanastomosed with running suture (polypropylene 6.0) to the central bifurcation, starting from the cephalad corner with small bites and with a second knot at the caudal corner; before the final closing knot, the anastomosis was “inflated” with blood; any bleeding points due to this action were sealed using isolated stitches with polypropylene 7.0. 7…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a recent meta-analysis, postoperative hypertension was mainly found after the eversion technique [45]. The reason for this finding could be the loss of baroreceptor reflex, linked to the transection of the sensory tissue, and the subsequent deregulation of negative feedback operated by the carotid baroreceptor [46]. Conflicting results were obtained by other authors who did not demonstrate the association between the surgical technique and the rate of post-CEA hypertension in another group of 560 patients.…”
Section: Evidences and Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 96%