Stroke, Vol 7, 554-559, Copyright © 1976 by American Heart Association
GH Matsumoto, JD Baker, CW Watson, B Gleucklich and AD Callow
Some patients who have transient ischemic attacks are denied operation
because severe occlusive lesions in other extra-cranial arteries may be
inappropriately interpreted as constituting an unacceptable surgical risk,
or because the lesion is so distal as to make its removal hazardous.
Failure of endarterectomy is usually due to incomplete removal of the
lesion or to thrombosis upon the frayed intima. Such lesions require
excellent visualization and meticulous surgical technique -- not always
possible with a shunt. Among 130 consecutive carotid endarterectomies
performed under general anesthesia, EEG changes consistent with cerebral
ischemia appeared in only nine (7%). These patients required a shunt. In 11
patients normal EEG tracings were obtained during endarterectomy despite
contralateral carotid occlusion. None of these patients had a neurological
deficit. Continuous EEG monitoring is a reliable method of detecting
changes in cerebral perfusion, permits a more meticulous endarterectomy in
high- lying lesions without a shunt, and extends operability in high risk
patients. Angiographical findings may be an unreliable predictor concerning
risk of endarterectomy.
ARTICLES
EEG surveillance as a means of extending operability in high risk carotid endarterectomy
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