In the treatment of carotid stenosis, the first priority is to treat the cardiovascular risk factors. These include smoking, lack of exercise, malnutrition, high blood lipids and elevated blood pressure. By improving these factors, the prognosis of the course of the disease can be massively improved even without medication or surgical intervention - the growth of stenoses is prevented or can even be reversed with strict lifestyle changes. In addition, platelet aggregation inhibitors are usually administered (drugs that inhibit the accumulation of blood platelets and thus the formation of thrombus - for example acetylsalicylic acid).
In addition to these treatment approaches, surgical interventions in the form of endarterectomy (removal of the narrowing) or carotid angioplasty (widening of the narrowing by means of a catheter) are also available as treatment options, especially for symptomatic patients (after a stroke or a transient ischaemic attack). Surgical intervention is most beneficial when the vessel is already constricted to more than 70% of its original diameter. Male patients benefit more from surgery, but the cause is not known.
Endarterectomy
During endarterectomy, the stenosed carotid artery is exposed through an approximately ten centimetre long incision, either under general or local anaesthesia. The vessel is cut completely, the narrowed area is removed and then the loose ends are sutured back together - if necessary with a plastic patch or a piece of vein.
The procedure takes about an hour in total, but the affected artery is only clamped for 15 to 30 minutes. During the operation, the brain is therefore mainly supplied via the artery on the other side of the neck. The risk of having a stroke during the operation due to detached pieces of the stenosis is up to 5%.
Carotid Angioplasty
Instead of removing the stenosis through surgery, it can also be dilated using carotid angioplasty. In this procedure, a balloon catheter is inserted into the femoral artery and advanced to the carotid artery, where the balloon is used to dilate the narrowed area. To ensure that the dilated area remains open for a longer period of time, a stent (tubular vessel support) is also inserted.
In contrast to endarterectomy, carotid angioplasty is not yet a proven routine procedure. It is used in patients in whom the vessel has narrowed again despite endarterectomy or if the stenosis cannot be operated on for anatomical reasons.