Eigenbrodt Marsha L, Evans Gregory W, Rose Kathryn M, Bursac Zoran, Tracy Richard E, Mehta Jawahar L, Couper David J
College of Medicine and Fay W, Boozman College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA.
Cardiovasc Ultrasound. 2013 Jun 15;11:22. doi: 10.1186/1476-7120-11-22.
External common carotid artery (CCA) diameter and intima-media thickness (IMT) are independently associated with incident stroke and other cardiovascular events. Arterial geometry such as large IMT and large diameter may reflect vulnerable plaques and so impact stroke risk. Finally, arterial changes that exist bilaterally may increase stroke risk.
We studied middle-aged men and women (n=7276) from a prospective observational study who had right (R) and left (L) CCA IMT and external diameters measured via B-mode ultrasound (1987-89) in order to categorize CCA geometry. Using side- and gender-specific IMT and diameter medians, we categorized each measurement as large (≥ median) vs. not large (< median) and defined four geometries: both IMT and diameter were large, only one parameter was large, or neither was large (reference group). Participants were followed for first time stroke through December 31, 1999. We used proportional hazards models to assess associations between right and left CCA geometries with new stroke. We also calculated positive and negative likelihood ratios (+LR and -LR) for CCA bilateral phenotypes as a measure of diagnostic accuracy.
Presence of both large CCA IMT and large diameter on one side was associated with strong stroke risk even after risk factor adjustment (men: RCCA hazard ratio [HR]=3.7 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.9-7.4; LCCA HR=2.4 95% CI=1.4-4.4; women: RCCA HR=4.0 95% CI=1.5-10.5; LCCA HR=5.7 95% CI=1.7-19.0). Presence of both large IMT and large diameter bilaterally was the strongest predictor of stroke identifying 64% of women and 44% of men who developed strokes. This phenotype showed potential for predicting stroke among individuals (women: +LR=3.1, 95% CI=2.6-3.8; men: +LR=2.3, 95% CI=1.8-2.8).
Bilateral carotid artery geometries may be useful for stroke risk prediction.
颈外动脉(CCA)直径和内膜中层厚度(IMT)与中风及其他心血管事件的发生独立相关。诸如较大的IMT和直径等动脉几何形态可能反映易损斑块,进而影响中风风险。最后,双侧存在的动脉变化可能会增加中风风险。
我们对一项前瞻性观察性研究中的中年男性和女性(n = 7276)进行了研究,这些人通过B型超声测量了右侧(R)和左侧(L)CCA的IMT及外径(1987 - 1989年),以便对CCA几何形态进行分类。利用特定侧别和性别的IMT及直径中位数,我们将每次测量分类为大(≥中位数)与不大(<中位数),并定义了四种几何形态:IMT和直径均大、只有一个参数大、或两者均不大(参照组)。对参与者随访至1999年12月31日首次中风情况。我们使用比例风险模型评估右侧和左侧CCA几何形态与新发中风之间的关联。我们还计算了CCA双侧表型的阳性和阴性似然比(+LR和 -LR),作为诊断准确性的一种衡量指标。
即使在调整风险因素后,一侧同时存在较大的CCA IMT和较大直径也与强烈的中风风险相关(男性:右侧CCA风险比[HR]=3.7,95%置信区间[CI]=1.9 - 7.4;左侧CCA HR = 2.4,95% CI = 1.4 - 4.4;女性:右侧CCA HR = 4.0,95% CI = 1.5 - 10.5;左侧CCA HR = 5.7,95% CI = 1.7 - 19.0)。双侧同时存在较大的IMT和较大直径是中风最强的预测因素,可识别出64%发生中风的女性和44%发生中风的男性。这种表型在个体中显示出预测中风的潜力(女性:+LR = 3.1,95% CI = 2.6 - 3.8;男性:+LR = 2.3,95% CI = 1.8 - 2.8)。
双侧颈动脉几何形态可能有助于中风风险预测。