Abstract
PURPOSE
To assess the ability of color-flow Doppler sonography (CFDS) to detect plaque ulcerations in patients who had high-grade to thread-like carotid artery stenosis and who underwent carotid endarterectomy.
METHODS
CFDS is a noninvasive diagnostic technique that allows, in addition to spatial visualization of blood flow, the identification of abnormal blood flow patterns such as vortex formation. There is evidence that pathologic anatomic changes in the vascular wall (such as ulcerations) may result in characteristic hemodynamic alterations. Therefore, solely hemodynamic criteria (detection of vortices) were used to diagnose ulceration. The results of preoperative examinations were compared to the intraoperative findings in 89 patients in a prospective and blinded way.
RESULTS
CFDS proved highly sensitive (95.3%), specific (93.5%), and accurate (94.0%) for demonstrating ulcerative plaques.
CONCLUSION
CFDS may be of significant advantage for examining plaque morphology in patients who have high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis, and in whom accurate, noninvasive diagnosis of plaque ulceration was previously difficult, if not impossible.
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