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The Effect of Lesion Length on Doppler Velocities Used Routinely to Determine Carotid Stenosis Cross-Sectional Severity

Background/Objective: Transcutaneous Doppler ultrasound is a fundamental tool in evaluating carotid stenosis cross-sectional severity (CS-CSS) in clinical practice because peak-systolic and end-diastolic velocities (PSV, EDV) increase with angiographic diameter stenosis.… Click to show full abstract

Background/Objective: Transcutaneous Doppler ultrasound is a fundamental tool in evaluating carotid stenosis cross-sectional severity (CS-CSS) in clinical practice because peak-systolic and end-diastolic velocities (PSV, EDV) increase with angiographic diameter stenosis. We tested the hypothesis that lesion length (LL) may affect PSV and EDV. Methods: CARUS (Carotid Artery IntravasculaR Ultrasound Study) prospectively enrolled 300 consecutive patients (age 47–83 years, 64.3% men, 63.3% symptomatic) with carotid stenosis ≥50% by Doppler ultrasound considered diagnostic (corelab analyst). We correlated stenosis LL (mm) and minimal lumen area (MLA, mm2) with PSV and EDV. Results: IVUS imaging (20 MHz Volcano/Philips) was uncomplicated. As IVUS probe forward/backward movement with systole/diastole (“jumping”-related artifact superimposed on motorized pullback) restrained LL (but not MLA) determination, LL measurement was angiographic. Final data set included 293 patients/stenoses (applicable to seven angiograms unsuitable for LL measurement). Irrespective of CS-CSS, a significant LL effect on PSV and EDV occurred with LL ≥ 7 mm (n = 224/293, i.e., 76.5% study patients/lesions; r = 0.38 and r = 0.35); for MLA irrespective of CS-CCS the coefficients were r = 0.49 (PSV) and r = 0.42 (EDV); p < 0.001 for all. For LL and MLA considered together, the correlations were stronger: r = 0.61 (PSV) and r = 0.54 (EDV); p < 0.0001 for both. Combined LL and MLA effect was represented by the following formulas: PSV = 0.31 × LL/MLA + 2.02 [m/s]; EDV = 0.12 × LL/MLA + 0.63 [m/s], enabling to correct the PSV (EDV)-based assessment of CS-CSS for the LL effect. Conclusions: This study provides, for the first time, systematic evidence that the length of carotid stenosis significantly affects lesional Doppler velocities. We established formulas incorporating the contribution of both stenosis length and its cross-sectional severity to PSV and EDV. We advocate including stenosis length measurement in duplex ultrasound reports when performing PSV (EDV)-based assessment of carotid cross-sectional stenosis severity.

Keywords: length; stenosis; cross sectional; psv edv; carotid stenosis

Journal Title: Diagnostics
Year Published: 2025

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