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Comparative Study
. 1985 Mar;149(3):362-7.
doi: 10.1016/s0002-9610(85)80108-2.

Surgical and nonsurgical treatment of total carotid artery occlusion

Comparative Study

Surgical and nonsurgical treatment of total carotid artery occlusion

B Satiani et al. Am J Surg. 1985 Mar.

Abstract

The natural history of totally occluded internal and common carotid arteries was studied in 102 patients (109 arteries) with a 97 percent follow-up (mean 39.7 months.) Symptomatic occlusions occurred in 72.6 percent of the patients, the reconstructed group (46 patients) having a greater number of symptomatic vessels than the nonreconstructed group (63 patients) (p less than 0.05). Contralateral disease was encountered in 46 percent. Initial mortality was 5 percent. Twenty patients (19.6 percent) were dead at the time of follow-up. Half of these deaths were from strokes and three fourths from atherosclerotic causes. Persisting neurologic symptoms were present in 14 percent of the patients and new events occurred in 5 percent. Fifteen percent of initially asymptomatic vessels were symptomatic at last follow-up. Twenty-one percent of the symptomatic occluded vessels were symptomatic on follow-up, 16 percent being in the reconstructed group and 26 percent in the nonreconstructed group.

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