Department of Neurology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL.
Department of Neurology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2022 Aug;31(8):106540. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2022.106540. Epub 2022 May 26.
The internal carotid artery (ICA) angle of origin may contribute to atherogenesis by altered hemodynamics. We aim to determine the contribution of vascular risk factors and arterial wall changes to ICA angle variations.
We analyzed 1,065 stroke-free participants from the population-based Northern Manhattan Study who underwent B-mode ultrasound (mean age 68.7±8.9 years; 59% women). ICA angle was estimated at the intersection between the common carotid artery and the ICA center line projections. Narrower external angles translating into greater carotid bifurcation bending were considered unfavorable. Linear regression models were fitted to assess the relationship between ICA angle and demographics, vascular risk factors, and arterial wall changes including carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) and plaque presence.
ICA angles were narrower on the left compared to the right side (153±15.4 degrees versus 161.4±12.7 degrees, p<0.01). Mean cIMT was 0.9±0.1 mm and 54.3% had at least one plaque. ICA angle was not associated with cIMT or plaque presence. Unfavorable left and right ICA angles were associated with advanced age (per 10-year increase β=-1.6; p=0.01, and -1.3; p=0.03, respectively) and being Black participant (β=-4.6; p<0.01 and -2.9; p=0.04, respectively), while unfavorable left ICA angle was associated with being female (β=-2.8; p=0.03) and increased diastolic blood pressure (per 10 mmHg increase β=-2.1; p<0.01). Overall, studied factors explained less than 10% of the variance in ICA angle (left R=0.07; right R=0.05).
Only a small portion of ICA angle variation were explained by demographics, vascular risk factors and arterial wall changes. Whether ICA angle is determined by other environmental or genetic factors, and is an independent risk factor for atherogenesis, requires further investigation.
起源内颈动脉(ICA)角度可能通过改变血液动力学而导致动脉粥样硬化形成。我们旨在确定血管危险因素和动脉壁变化对 ICA 角度变化的贡献。
我们分析了来自基于人群的北曼哈顿研究的 1065 名无卒中参与者(平均年龄 68.7±8.9 岁;59%为女性),他们接受了 B 型超声检查。ICA 角度是在颈总动脉和 ICA 中心线投影的交点处估计的。更狭窄的外部角度意味着颈动脉分叉弯曲更大,被认为是不利的。线性回归模型用于评估 ICA 角度与人口统计学、血管危险因素以及包括颈动脉内膜-中层厚度(cIMT)和斑块存在在内的动脉壁变化之间的关系。
与右侧相比,左侧 ICA 角度更窄(153±15.4 度与 161.4±12.7 度,p<0.01)。平均 cIMT 为 0.9±0.1mm,54.3%的参与者至少有一个斑块。ICA 角度与 cIMT 或斑块存在无关。不利的左侧和右侧 ICA 角度与年龄较大(每增加 10 岁β=-1.6;p=0.01 和 -1.3;p=0.03)和黑人参与者(β=-4.6;p<0.01 和 -2.9;p=0.04)相关,而不利的左侧 ICA 角度与女性(β=-2.8;p=0.03)和舒张压升高(每增加 10mmHgβ=-2.1;p<0.01)相关。总的来说,研究因素解释了 ICA 角度变化的不到 10%(左侧 R=0.07;右侧 R=0.05)。
只有一小部分 ICA 角度变化可以用人口统计学、血管危险因素和动脉壁变化来解释。ICA 角度是否由其他环境或遗传因素决定,以及是否是动脉粥样硬化形成的独立危险因素,需要进一步研究。