Title: Cerebrovascular Evaluation
1Cerebrovascular Evaluation
- The Role of Ultrasound in the Management of
Cerebrovascular Disease
2Stroke
- gt700,000 strokes per year in the US
- The leading cause of permanent disability
- Annual cost to patients, hospitals society is
51 billion dollars - Ultrasound provides a fast, portable,
noninvasive, repeatable inexpensive diagnostic
technique - Ultrasound directly impacts the clinical
decision-making
3Stroke
- Ultrasound directly impacts the clinical
decision-making in the following situations - The early detection, quantification
characterization of extracranial atherosclerosis
occlusive disease - The consequences of proximal arterial occlusive
disease on the distal cerebral vasculature - The detection of microemboli associated with
cardiac aortic pathology carotid artery
surgical manipulation - Selection of children with sickle cell disease
for blood transfusion as an effective tool in
primary stroke prevention - The natural history response to treatment of
acute arterial occlusion that causes hyperacute
stroke - The time, course reversibility of cerebral
vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage
4Definitions
- Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA)
- A neurologic deficit which resolves within 24
hours - Most resolve within a few minutes
- Resolving Ischemic Neurologic Deficit (RIND)
- A neurologic deficit which lasts gt24 hours but
does eventually resolve - Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA) stroke
- Permanent neurologic deficit
5TIA
- Medical emergency
- 10 of patients with TIA will have a stroke
within three months - 50 of strokes will occur within 2 days after
the initial symptoms - Clinical history, knowledge of neurologic
symptoms timely evaluation are essential in the
work-up of these patients
6Stroke Risk Factors
- Hypertension
- Hyperlipidemia
- Cholesterol
- Triglycerides
- Tobacco abuse
- Diabetes Mellitus
7Elective Cerebrovascular Testing
- Carotid arteries supply the anterior circulation
- Territories supplied by the
- Middle cerebral artery
- Anterior cerebral artery
- Symptoms associated with the anterior circulation
- Unilateral weakness
- Arm or leg
- Dysphasia or Aphasia
- Difficulty with speaking (expressive aphasia)
- Inability to speak
- Hemianopsia
- Partial loss of a visual field
- Amaurosis fugax
- Transient monocular blindness
- Behavioral disturbances
8Elective Cerebrovascular Testing
- Vertebral-Basilar arteries supply the posterior
circulation - Brainstem
- Cerebellum
- Midbrain
- Visual cortex
- Symptoms associated with the posterior
circulation - Bilateral weakness
- Dysarthria - slurred speech
- Dizziness
- Ataxia - disturbance of movement coordination
- Loss of consciousness - syncope, near syncope
- Drop attacks - sudden falling to the ground,
usually without loss of consciousness - Cortical blindness
- Diplopia - double vision
- Paresthesia - abnormal sensation, e.g. tingling
numbness, without objective cause
9Other Terms
- Paresis
- Partial or incomplete paralysis
- - plegia
- Suffix meaning paralysis or stroke
- Paraplegia
- Hemiplegia
10Mechanisms of Stroke
- Large vessel athero-thrombotic stroke
- Cardiogenic embolic stroke
- Primarily patients with atrial fibrillation
- Lacunar stroke
- Occlusive lesions develop in the small
perforating vessels of the brain - Other
- Dissection
- Coagulopathy
- Paradoxical embolism
- Cryptogenic (indeterminate)
11Nonatherosclerotic
- Nonatherosclerotic causes
- Cardiogenic embolic
- Paradoxical embolism, e.g. due to patent foramen
ovale - Dissection
- Coagulopathy
- Fibromuscular Dysplasia (FMD)
- Trauma
- Carotid body tumor
- Aneurysm
- Radionecrosis
12Indications for First-Ever Assessment
- Symptoms of stroke or TIA attributable to carotid
artery distribution - Carotid bruit asymptomatic
- Suspicion of carotid stenosis from other imaging
tests, i.e. MRA, CTA - Preoperative screening for carotid stenosis
- Assessment of a high cardiovascular risk patient
13Re-evaluation Indications
- Follow-up to known disease (surveillance)
- Q 6 12 months
- Follow-up to treatment (surveillance)
- After 6 weeks - 3 months then Q 6 12 months
- Recurring symptoms following treatment
14Carotid Trials
- NASCET North American Symptomatic Carotid
Endarterectomy Trial - ACAS Asymptomatic Carotid Atherosclerosis Study
- ECST European Carotid Surgery Trial
15Carotid Trials
- Established guidelines for type of intervention
based on the level of ICA stenosis - Types of intervention
- Surgical
- Endarterectomy
- Endoluminal
- Balloon angioplasty wall stent placement
- Medical
- Antiplatelet
- Aspirin
- Plavix
16Treatment How When
- Symptomatic patients
- Carotid Endarterectomy (CEA) beneficial when
the ICA stenosis is gt70 diameter reduction - CEA potentially better than medical treatment
when the ICA stenosis is 50-69 diameter
reduction - Medical treatment (antiplatelet) when the ICA
stenosis is lt50 diameter reduction
17Treatment How When
- Asymptomatic patients
- Patients with gt60 stenosis
- 2 per year have a stroke
- CEA reduces this to 1 incidence
- Risks may outweigh the benefits
- CEA if life expectancy is gt5 years
- CEA in select patients found to have the
following - high risk unstable appearing plaques on B-mode
imaging - Frequent distal embolization or impaired
vasomotor reactivity on transcranial Doppler
(TCD)
18Carotid Endarterectomy Trials
- NASCET
- North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy
Trials - Established there is significant benefit of CEA
medical treatment for symptomatic patients with
70-99 ICA stenosis - ACAS
- Asymptomatic Carotid Atherosclerosis Study
- Established there is little surgical benefit to
CEA in asymptomatic, good-risk patients with
asymptomatic ICA stenosis of 60-99 - ECST
- European Carotid Surgery Trial
- Established that CEA reduced the risk of stroke
in patients with 70-99 ICA stenosis - However, a 70 ICA stenosis by the ECST method is
equal to an approximate 50 ICA stenosis by the
NASCET method
19Stenosis Determination Methods
- (N) method utilized during the NASCET ACAS
- Compares the ICA residual lumen at the point of
greatest stenosis to a distal ICA normal segment,
beyond the carotid bulb - Most widely used
-
- (E) method utilized during the ECST
- Compares the measured residual lumen to an
assumed normal ICA bulb dimension
20NASCET - ACAS MethodNorth American (N) Method
Stenosis
Residual Lumen (N) Normalized distal ICA
diameter (D)
100 x
1 -
21Percent Stenosis - Bulb MethodEuropean (E) Method
TL
RL
True lumen is the estimated size of bulb at
the point of maximum narrowing
22NASCET/ACAS vs. ECST Methods
23Consensus Panel 2002
Primary Parameters
Additional Parameters
Degree of stenosis ()
ICA PSV (cm/s)
Plaque Estimate ()
ICA/CCA PSV Ratio
ICA EDV (cm/s)
Normal
lt125
None
lt2.0
lt40
lt50
lt125
lt50
lt2.0
lt40
50 69
125 230
gt50
2.0 4.0
40 100
70, but lt near total occlusion
gt230
gt50
gt4.0
gt100
Near occlusion
High, low or undetectable
Visible
Variable
Variable
Total occlusion
Undetectable
Visible, no detectable lumen
N/A
N/A
Plaque estimates (diameter reduction) with gray
scale and color Doppler US
24Ultrasound Plaque Characterization
- US can be used to characterize plaque formation,
assessing its relative risk for causing stroke - Evaluate for
- Location
- Composition
- Echo characteristics
- Surface characteristics
25Carotid Plaque High Risk
- Majority of patients have mild to moderate
plaquing - B-mode characteristics of high risk plaque
- Hypoechoic plaque
- Uniformly or predominantly echolucent plaques,
types 1 2 respectively - Heterogeneous plaque
26Calcified PlaqueAcoustical Shadow
Where do I sample?
27Ulcerative Plaque
28Extracranial Duplex Scan Other Roles
- Assessment for carotid lesions other than
atherosclerosis - Dissection
- FMD
- Radionecrosis
- Vertebral artery evaluation
- Stenosis or occlusion
- Direction of flow, i.e. subclavian steal
- Dissection
29Radiologic Methods
- Catheter angiography
- Invasive, utilizes ionizing radiation contrast
material, water soluble iodine, which is injected
through the catheter - Benefits
- Very detailed representation of blood vessels
- Possible to assess blood vessels at several body
sites - Catheter makes it possible to diagnose treat in
single session - Risks
- Reaction to contrast
- Access vessel blockage due to clot formation on
the catheter - Contrast material can damage the kidneys, esp.
diabetics and renal patients - Vessel rupture leading to hemorrhage
- Disruption of plaque in the access vessel leading
to embolization - Access vessel dissection
- Pseudoaneurysm
30Radiologic Methods
- Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA)
- Utilizes ionizing radiation contrast material,
water soluble iodine, which is injected into a
small peripheral vein - Benefits
- Noninvasive, except for peripheral IV
- No risk of damaging an artery
- Detailed images of blood vessels in key areas of
the body - More detail than MRA
- Less time consuming, considered safer is
possibly more cost effective than catheter
angiography - Risks/Limitations
- Allergic reaction to the dye
- Should be avoided in diabetics renal patients
as the dye may further impair kidney function - Leakage of the dye under the skin can cause
damage - Avoided in first three months of pregnancy
31Radiologic Methods
- Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA)
- Utilizes radiofrequency waves in a strong
magnetic field causing the release of
electromagnetic energy, contrast material
(gadolinium) may or may not be administered - Benefits
- No ionizing radiation
- Less time cost than catheter angiography
- No risk of damaging an artery
- High quality images of blood vessels even without
contrast - Risks/Limitations
- Not as detailed as catheter angiography or CTA
- Metal implants can make good image acquisition
difficult or impossible - Cannot be utilized in patients with pacemakers
- Avoided in the first three months of pregnancy