Carotid Artery Stenting: Single-Center Experience Over 11 Years

This article reports the results of carotid artery stenting during an 11-year period. Data from 168 carotid artery stenting procedures (symptomatic, n  = 55; asymptomatic, n  = 101; symptoms not accessible, n  = 12) were retrospectively collected. Primary technical success rate, neurological events...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cardiovascular and interventional radiology 2010-04, Vol.33 (2), p.251-259
Hauptverfasser: Nolz, Richard, Schernthaner, Rüdiger Egbert, Cejna, Manfred, Schernthaner, Melanie, Lammer, Johannes, Schoder, Maria
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article reports the results of carotid artery stenting during an 11-year period. Data from 168 carotid artery stenting procedures (symptomatic, n  = 55; asymptomatic, n  = 101; symptoms not accessible, n  = 12) were retrospectively collected. Primary technical success rate, neurological events in-hospital, access-site complications, and contrast-induced nephropathy ( n  = 118) were evaluated. To evaluate the influence of experience in carotid artery stenting on intraprocedural neurologic complications, patients were divided into two groups. Group 1 included the first 80 treated patients, and group 2 the remainder of the patients ( n  = 88). In-stent restenoses at last-follow-up examinations ( n  = 89) were assessed. The overall primary technical success rate was 95.8%. The in-hospital stroke-death rate was 3.0% ( n  = 5; symptomatic, 5.4%; asymptomatic, 2.0%; p  = 0.346). Neurologic complications were markedly higher in group 1 (4.2%; three major strokes; symptomatic, 2.8%, asymptomatic, 1.4%) compared to group 2 (2.4%; one major and one minor stroke—symptomatic, 1.2%, asymptomatic 1.2%), but this was not statistically significant. Further complications were access-site complications in 12 (7.1%), with surgical revision required in 1 (0.6%) and mild contrast-induced nephropathy in 1 (0.85%). Twenty-one (23.6%) patients had >50% in-stent restenosis during a mean follow-up of 28.2 months. In conclusion, advanced experience in carotid artery stenting leads to an acceptable periprocedural stroke-death rate. In-stent restenosis could be a critical factor during the follow-up course.
ISSN:0174-1551
1432-086X
DOI:10.1007/s00270-009-9673-9