Carotid artery disease and stroke during coronary artery bypass: A critical review of the literature

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Abstract

Objectives: to determine the role of carotid artery disease in the pathophysiology of stroke after coronary artery bypass (CABG). Design: systematic review of the literature. Results: the risk of stroke after CABG was 2% and remained unchanged between 1970-2000. Two-thirds occurred after day 1 and 23% died. 91% of screened CABG patients had no significant carotid disease and had a <2% risk of perioperative stroke. Stroke risk increased to 3% in predominantly asymptomatic patients with a unilateral 50-99% stenosis, 5% in those with bilateral 50-99% stenoses and 7-11% in patients with carotid occlusion. Significant predictive factors for post-CABG stroke included; (i) carotid bruit (OR 3.6, 95% CI 2.8-4.6), (ii) prior stroke/TIA (OR 3.6, 95% CI 2.7-4.9) and (iii) severe carotid stenosis/occlusion (OR 4.3, 95% CI 3.2-5.7). However, the systematic review indicated that 50% of stroke sufferers did not have significant carotid disease and 60% of territorial infarctions on CT scan/autopsy could not be attributed to carotid disease alone. Conclusions: carotid disease is an important aetiological factor in the pathophysiology of post-CABG stroke. However, even assuming that prophylactic carotid endarterectomy carried no additional risk, it could only ever prevent about 40-50% of procedural strokes. © 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Naylor, A. R., Mehta, Z., Rothwell, P. M., & Bell, P. R. F. (2002). Carotid artery disease and stroke during coronary artery bypass: A critical review of the literature. European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, 23(4), 283–294. https://doi.org/10.1053/ejvs.2002.1609

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