How Carotid Disease Causes Stroke
Stroke from carotid disease occurs by two mechanisms. First, a piece of plaque or a small clot can break off from the diseased artery wall and travel to the brain, blocking a blood vessel and causing sudden stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA — a brief ‘mini-stroke’). Second, a severely narrowed carotid artery can reduce blood flow to the brain below the threshold needed to sustain brain tissue. Both mechanisms are preventable with timely intervention.
Carotid Disease Symptoms
Many patients with carotid disease have no symptoms — their stenosis is discovered incidentally on imaging or during screening. When symptoms occur, they include transient ischemic attacks (TIAs): brief episodes of one-sided face or arm weakness, speech difficulty, or sudden vision loss in one eye (amaurosis fugax) that resolve within 24 hours. A TIA is a medical emergency and a warning that a major stroke is imminent without treatment.
Diagnosing Carotid Disease in Sarasota & Bradenton
Carotid duplex ultrasound is the primary screening and diagnostic test, providing accurate measurement of stenosis degree and characterization of plaque morphology. CTA or MRA of the carotid arteries is performed when intervention is planned, providing anatomical detail of the carotid bifurcation, neck vessels, and intracranial circulation.
Carotid Disease Treatment Options
Carotid Endarterectomy (CEA)
CEA is the gold-standard surgical treatment for symptomatic and high-grade asymptomatic carotid stenosis. The surgeon makes a small incision in the neck, opens the carotid artery, and removes the plaque under direct vision. CEA has been proven in landmark randomized trials to reduce stroke risk by 50–65% in symptomatic patients with stenosis greater than 50% and in asymptomatic patients with stenosis greater than 60–70%.
Transcarotid Artery Revascularization (TCAR)
TCAR is an innovative, minimally invasive technique in which a small incision is made at the base of the neck. The carotid artery is accessed directly and blood flow is temporarily reversed — away from the brain — using a specialized flow-reversal system that captures any debris dislodged during stent placement before it can travel to the brain. TCAR offers the stroke-risk protection of CEA with the minimal invasiveness of a catheter-based approach and is preferred for high-surgical-risk patients.
Carotid Artery Stenting
Carotid stenting is a catheter-based procedure performed via access in the groin. A stent is deployed within the narrowed carotid artery to scaffold the vessel open. It is an appropriate option for patients with anatomy or comorbidities that make CEA or TCAR high risk. Embolic protection devices are used to capture debris during the procedure.