Cerebrovascular disease
Overview
"Cerebrovascular disease" refers to the buildup of plaque in the arteries that supply blood to the brain, which increases the risk of a disabling stroke. The carotid arteries in the front of the neck - which supply blood to the brain and face - are the ones most often affected.
Common symptoms
Most patients who are at risk for this condition don't have any symptoms until their first stroke, which may leave them with a permanent disability, or if they are lucky, can resolve completely. Typical symptoms of a stroke include numbness or paralysis of one side of the body, inability to speak, blindness of one eye, or garbled or slurred speech. Patients who experience these symptoms should immediately go to an emergency room for treatment to reduce the risk of permanent damage from the stroke. Even if symptoms go away on their own, patients who do not seek medical treatment are still at high risk for more strokes in the coming months.
Specialty care
Treatment options
There are a number of different diagnostic tests of varying degrees of expense and invasiveness that can diagnose atherosclerotic narrowing of the carotid arteries. Patients without symptoms are best screened with a duplex ultrasound assessment of their carotid arteries performed in the non-invasive vascular laboratory. This painless test is the least expensive and least invasive of all of the types of scans and can detect the presence of significant narrowing caused by atherosclerotic plaque which correlates with the risk of stroke. In patients actually experiencing a stroke, CT or MR assessment of the carotid arteries may be performed instead at the time of a scan of the brain to assess the damage caused by the stroke. Duplex ultrasound is the most common means of following carotid artery narrowing in patients with an insufficient severity of narrowing to recommend treatment at the time, for progression of their narrowing to more critical levels in need of treatment.
Patients who have experienced stroke symptoms related to carotid artery narrowing, or those with no symptoms but a significant severity of narrowing, should be treated to reduce their risk of stroke. Presently, carotid endarterectomy, an operation that cleans out the plaque in the carotid artery, is the recognized best treatment to prevent disabling stroke. In some instances, carotid artery stenting may be the preferred option, but most patients do not fit the narrow guidelines for this type of treatment, which attempts to stabilize the atherosclerotic plaque rather than removing it. Your vascular surgeon, a vascular specialist capable of diagnosing the condition and treating it by either surgery or stenting, is in the best position to objectively assess your situation and recommend the most appropriate treatment for you.
Atherosclerosis (also known as arteriosclerotic vascular disease or ASVD) is a condition in which an artery wall thickens as a result of the accumulation of fatty materials such as cholesterol.