Carotid angioplasty and stenting for symptomatic carotid kinking combined with stenosis

Li-jun WANG, Da-ming WANG, Jia-chun LIU, Jun LU, Peng QI, Xue-li JIANG, Hai-jing PENG

Abstract


Background Carotid endarterectomy (CEA) is currently the preferred treatment for severe carotid kinking and stenosis. Kinking is generally believed to be a relative contraindication for endovascular stent placement. This article aims to study the necessity, feasibility and security of carotid angioplasty and stenting (CAS) for symptomatic carotid kinking combined with stenosis, and summarize clinical experience of this disease according to therapeutic results. Methods Twenty-two cases with symptomatic carotid kinking and high-grade stenosis demonstrated by digital subtraction angiography (DSA) were performed CAS. Their clinical manifestations, imaging features, procedure safety and follow-up data were collected and retrospectively analyzed. All patients understood CEA and voluntarily received CAS. Results Twenty-two cases with carotid kinking and stenosis were all successfully performed CAS (the success rate was 100%) without stent-related disability or mortality. Twenty-four self-expandable stents were implanted. The mean degree of stenosis was reduced from 85.63% before stenting to 11.25% after stenting and the angles of kinking were improved from < 90° to > 120° (Metz' category). During the period of hospitalization, no transient ischemic attack (TIA) or cerebral infarction occurred, and the clinical symptoms and signs of ischemia, such as dizziness and headache, were improved or disappeared. Besides, no permenant complications or deaths happened. All cases were followed up from 6 to 72 months, among whom 1 patient experienced contralateral carotid TIA, and 2 patients experienced ipsilateral carotid TIA (one indicated aspirin resistance in platelet aggregation test and the other showed restenosis in DSA). Computed tomography angiography (CTA) of 10 patients and Duplex scan of 7 patients during the follow-up demonstrated carotid in good morphology and fluent blood flow, without kinking or restenosis. Conclusion CAS is a feasible and safe therapeutic method and maybe helpful to lower the risk of cerebral ischemia for the patients with symptomatic kinking and stenosis. However, further study is still needed.

Keywords


Carotid kinking (not in MeSH); Carotid stenosis; Angioplasty; Stents

Full Text: PDF

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.