Background. Approximately 730,000 strokes occur each year in the United States, costing an estimated $40 billion annually. One-half of all strokes are the result of atherosclerotic plaques found in the carotid artery. Such plaques frequently are heavily calcified and can be identified on a panoramic radiograph by the incidental finding of calcifications overlying the carotid bifurcation. Case Description. The authors found that a 67-year-old asymptomatic woman had calcium deposits overlying both carotid bifurcation regions on a panoramic radiograph. Subsequent duplex ultrasonic examination indicated bilateral, high-grade carotid arterial stenoses. The patient underwent uneventful bilateral carotid endarterectomy. Clinical Implications. The patient had critical carotid arterial stenoses associated with significant risk of stroke that had not been identified otherwise. The findings on the panoramic radiograph led to appropriate and potentially life-saving treatment. While the positive predictive value of this finding has yet to be defined, the authors believe that calcifications overlying the carotid system region seen on panoramic radiography in an asymptomatic patient should be followed by formal evaluation of the carotid bifurcation.
CITATION STYLE
Almog, D. M., Illig, K. A., Khin, M., & Green, R. M. (2000). Unrecognized carotid artery stenosis: Discovered by calcifications on a panoramic radiograph. Journal of the American Dental Association, 131(11), 1593–1597. https://doi.org/10.14219/jada.archive.2000.0088
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