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Carotid artery plaque composition — Relationship to clinical presentation and ultrasound B-mode imaging

Authors :
A. Antoniou
Henrik Sillesen
Michael J. Campbell
Henning Laursen
V. A. Knappertz
Tina G. Nielsen
U. Sliwka
D. Kardoulas
T.V. Schroeder
Werner H. Mess
Frans L. Moll
Rob G.A. Ackerstaff
T. K. Hames
M.C. Pereira
Jonathan Beard
J. Galhano-Rodrigues
Ramon Vila
C. Sievers
V. Gazzard
M. Goertler
B. Widder
E. Elbers
P. Gallagher
K. Survana
D. Georgopolous
S. Sherriff
G. Rotatcher
P. Arbeille
G. Gourtsoyannis
Mariella Catalano
S. Rogers
A. Vanswundrecht
Source :
European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery. 10:23-30
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1995.

Abstract

Objective:To correlate B-mode ultrasound findings to carotid plaque histology.Design:European multicentre study (nine centres).Material and Methods:Clinical presentation and risk factors were recorded and preoperative ultrasound Duplex scanning with special emphasis on B-mode imaging studies was performed in 270 patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy. Perioperatively, macroscopic plaque features were evaluated and the removed specimens were analysed histologically for fibrous tissue, calcification and ‘soft tissue’ (primarily haemorrhage and lipid).Results:Males had more soft tissue than females (p = 0.0006), hypertensive patients less soft tissue than normotensive (p = 0.01) and patients with recent symptoms more soft tissue than patients with earlier symptoms (p = 0.004). There was no correlation between surface description on ultrasound images compared to the surface judged intraoperatively by the surgeon. Echogenicity on B-mode images was inversely related to soft tissue (p = 0.005) and calcification was directly related to echogenicity (p < 0.0001). Heterogeneous plaques contained more calcification than homogeneous (p = 0.003), however, there was no difference in content of soft tissue.Conclusion:Ultrasound B-mode characteristics are related to the histological composition of carotid artery plaques and to patient's history. These results may imply that patients with distant symptoms may be regarded and treated as asymptomatic patients whereas asymptomatic patients with echolucent plaques should be considered for carotid endarterectomy.

Details

ISSN :
10785884
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e6b44d6dd4fdf4cd5490486e411d3497