Prognosis of Symptomatic Carotid Artery Occlusion
- 19 September 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Cerebrovascular Diseases
- Vol. 1 (5) , 245-256
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000108851
Abstract
We have reviewed the twelve prospective follow-up studies of angiographically documented symptomatic carotid artery occlusion in a total of 1,261 patients who were followed up over a mean period of 45.5 months. The average risk of death was 9.5% per year (95% confidence interval (CI): 8.4–10.7%), the risk of stroke was at least 7.0% per year (95% CI: 6.2–7.7%) and the risk of stroke ipsilaleral to the carotid occlusion was 5.9% per year (95% CI: 4.3–7.5%). The true risk of death and stroke has probably been underestimated in this review because of probable underreporting of non-stroke deaths, symptomatically mild strokes and stroke in vascular territories outside that of the occluded carotid artery. However, the proportion of strokes occurring ipsilateral to the occluded carotid artery may have been overestimated because some studies only reported the rate of ipsilateral stroke and not the rate of stroke in vascular territories outside that of the occluded carotid artery. The nature and severity of the presenting ischaemic symptoms did not appear to have a significant impact on prognosis. The mechanisms of stroke ipsilateral to the occluded carotid artery probably include embolism from the proximal ''stump'' through the collateral circulation, thrombo-embolism from propagated distal thrombosis and haemodynamic insufficiency. These results have been derived from methodologically heterogeneous studies and can only be used as an approximate guide to prognosis. Nevertheless, it is clear that carotid occlusion is not a stable condition, and patients should benefit from measures aimed at the prevention of subsequent major cardiovascular as well as cerebrovascular events.Keywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: