Abstract

Extracranial-to-intracranial (EC-IC) bypass surgery for the prevention of stroke in patients with symptomatic carotid artery occlusion has nearly ended after a randomized trial showed no benefit of the procedure. Although an EC-IC bypass might benefit patients with compromised cerebrovascular hemodynamics, the randomized trial did not differentiate patients with hemodynamic from embolic etiologies. However, subsequent investigators have identified a subgroup of patients at increased stroke risk from hemodynamic compromise. We examined the subsequent stroke rate of 42 patients with symptomatic carotid occlusion at high risk for stroke identified as having a baseline cerebral blood flow (CBF)<45 mL/100 g/min and a >5% CBF reduction in one vascular territory after a vasodilatory challenge from 1 g of intravenous acetazolamide on stable xenon-computed tomography (CT) CBF imaging. Thirty patients (group 1) treated medically were a subgroup with carotid occlusion from our long-term natural history study. During a median follow-up of 12 months, 9 patients (30%) had a new stroke within a median of 5 months. Twelve patients (group 2) had recurrent, disabling cerebral ischemic symptoms, with 8 progressing to mild fixed neurological deficits from deep white matter infarction identified on CT. All were treated with superficial temporal artery to distal middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) bypass with restoration of cerebrovascular reserve postoperatively; none had a stroke during the 18-month minimum follow-up (P=.041). Perioperative morbidity included subendocardial infarction in one and a small, asymptomatic left frontal hemorrhage in another patient. Early postoperative and delayed xenon/CT CBF studies obtained a median of 5 months postoperatively showed maintenance of cerebrovascular reserve. STA-MCA bypass surgery can restore cerebrovascular reserve in high-risk patients with symptomatic internal carotid artery occlusion. This was achieved with minimal perioperative complications, resulting in a subsequent reduction of stroke frequency. We suggest that the efficacy of STA-MCA bypass surgery for symptomatic carotid occlusion be re-examined prospectively using hemodynamic selection criteria.

Full Text
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