regard to the proper technique of obtaining velocity waveforms at sites of stenosis. In areas of mild to
moderate stenosis, use of a Doppler angle of 60 degrees to the long axis of the vessel is recommended.
However, in areas of more severe stenosis and/or wall abnormalities, the Doppler angle of 60 degrees
should be defined by the long axis of the stenotic flow jet, as demonstrated by color flow.
Figure 87-4. A and B: In the presence of innominate artery very high-grade stenosis or occlusion the common carotid artery (CCA)
waveform will be blunted with a decreased amplitude and slowed upstroke (A), and there can be actually reverse flow (B) in the
ipsilateral internal carotid artery (ICA).
Figure 87-5. Internal carotid artery (ICA) waveform from the site of a >80% ICA stenosis. Both peak systolic and end-diastolic
velocities are very elevated.
The sample volume size should be kept as small as possible, usually 1.5 mm, to detect discrete
changes in flow velocity. This is important as the highest velocities may be localized to a small area in
the flow stream that emanates from the stenosis. A large sample volume that incorporates flow from
many points within the vessel in the generation of the spectral waveform may give the false impression
of disturbed flow, potentially leading to the misdiagnosis of moderate disease in an otherwise normal
vessel. In practice, the sonographer, having identified the stenosis, gently moves a small sample volume
around until the point of highest velocity is found.
Damping of spectral Doppler waveforms may be seen in the region distal to the carotid stenosis when
the lesion is severe enough to be flow reducing. The most common abnormality seen distal to a carotid
stenosis is spectral broadening caused by disturbed blood flow or turbulence. At best, poststenotic flow
disturbance is a qualitative measure of arterial stenosis; nevertheless, its detection is important. With
proper gain settings, “fill-in” of the Doppler spectral waveform generally indicates the presence of
carotid stenosis with diameter reduction of at least 50%. However, this level of disturbed flow
occasionally can be seen with nonstenotic disease. Diagnostically, the most significant poststenotic flow
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disturbance produces a simultaneous forward and reverse spectral Doppler signal, accompanied by poor
definition of the upper spectral border. Such disturbed flow implies the presence of severe carotid
stenosis. Severely disturbed flow distal to a highly calcified plaque may be the only substantial evidence
for the presence of clinically significant stenosis if calcification prevents direct insonation of the
stenosis.
Figure 87-6. Bony landmarks of the vertebral bodies (arrow) mark the course of the vertebral artery.
Vertebral Artery
On rare occasions, a stenosis may be found in the cervical portion of the vertebral artery associated
with cervical osteoarthritis. However, the origin of the vertebral artery from the subclavian artery is by
far the most common site of disease in the vertebral artery. The vertebral artery origin lies deep in the
base of the neck and may be difficult to access with ultrasound. Mean vertebral artery diameter is about
4 mm but the vertebral arteries are frequently asymmetric in size with one, most commonly the left,
being larger than the right.
The vertebral artery is most commonly interrogated with ultrasound further distally in the neck, from
an anteroposterior window, as it threads through the transverse processes of the cervical spine. The
vertebral bodies serve as a reference to insure the vertebral artery is actually under examination (Fig.
87-6). The artery is usually seen deeper but adjacent to the vertebral vein. Color Doppler is helpful to
locate the vessel. A spectral waveform from the vertebral artery in the mid-neck provides information
about direction of flow, waveform shape, and velocity but does not rule out disease at the origin. The
normal vertebral artery waveform is similar to that of the ICA with normal PSVs reported to be 20 to
40 cm/s.6 Velocities up to 80 cm/s are, however, frequently seen without apparent clinical importance
and may represent collateral flow through a dominant vertebral artery, or a small but disease-free,
vertebral artery. Evaluation of disturbed flow distally may help determine which elevated velocities are
associated with a vertebral artery stenosis and which are not. Velocity patterns are usually similar in the
two vertebral arteries but systolic and diastolic velocities may differ if vertebral artery diameters are
asymmetric. For this reason if there is concern for stenosis based on an elevated peak systolic velocity
(PSV) in a vertebral artery, recording of vertebral artery diameters is important.
Flow in the vertebral artery is normally antegrade with a rapid upstroke and continuous diastolic
flow. In cases of anatomic subclavian steal, color flow provides an important initial clue to the diagnosis
as flow in the artery will be retrograde in the same direction as the vein. Spectral Doppler must still be
used to verify arterial flow and will demonstrate reverse or bidirectional flow in cases of subclavian
steal. Depending on the degree of subclavian stenosis the vertebral artery flow may be reversed or
biphasic, with flow above and below the baseline (Fig. 87-7A,B). End-diastolic flow will be zero or near
zero reflecting the high resistance of the peripheral arm circulation rather than low-resistance cerebral
circulation. High-resistance vertebral artery flow may also be seen with antegrade flow and like the
situation for the ICA may represent distal stenosis or occlusion of the vertebral artery or an atretic or
hypoplastic distal vessel.
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Figure 87-7. A and B: Both reverse vertebral artery flow (A), and vertebral flow both above and below the baseline (B) indicate a
proximal innominate or subclavian artery stenosis.
External Carotid Artery
The ECA is smaller in diameter than the ICA at the level of the carotid bulb but similar in diameter
beyond the bulb. It has little clinical significance in most cases but can serve as an important source of
collateral flow to the brain in cases of ICA very high-grade stenosis, or occlusion. The ECA may also
serve in such cases as a conduit for emboli to the brain; the so-called carotid stump syndrome.7
The ECA waveform has a sharp upstroke, a prominent dichroitic wave in late systole or early diastole,
and velocity that is near or at the zero base line in end-diastole. The PSV of the ECA is normally higher
than the ICA. The ECA may adopt the characteristics of the ICA in end-diastole as the resistance in the
face and scalp decreases with temperature change and/or in the presence of disease. In cases of common
carotid occlusion with preservation of patency of the carotid bulb, reverse flow in the ECA can provide
antegrade flow in the ICA maintaining patency of the ICA even with CCA occlusion.
Classifying Carotid Stenosis
Duplex criteria for quantifying carotid artery stenosis were developed by comparing duplex-derived
spectral waveforms and contrast arteriograms. Duplex-derived categories of stenosis are relatively broad.
Sensitivities and specificities for spectral analysis of duplex-derived waveforms for detecting an ICA
stenosis of >50% to 99% are between 90% and 95%. There are numerous spectral criteria for
classifying ICA stenosis. Some focus on categories of stenosis, whereas others focus on threshold levels of
stenosis.
One of the most widely accepted classification schemes for categories for ICA stenosis was developed
at the University of Washington under the direction of Dr. Eugene Strandness. These criteria were useful
in the study of the natural history of carotid atherosclerosis and in clinical practice. In the University of
Washington system, velocity waveform analysis and spectral criteria were used to classify ICA
angiographic stenosis as normal, 1% to 15%, 16% to 49%, 50% to 79%, and 80% to 99% stenosis and
occlusion. Prospective validation of these criteria has demonstrated an overall agreement of 82% with
contrast angiography. The ability of the criteria to detect carotid disease is 99% sensitive and the ability
of the criteria to recognize normal arteries is 84% specific.3
Criteria for detecting carotid artery stenosis scanning have undergone reevaluation to remain relevant
to current clinical practice. This reevaluation was stimulated by the randomized trials testing the
efficacy of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) that took place over the last two decades (Table 87-1).8–12 The
trials had a profound impact on validating the indications for CEA in patients with carotid bifurcation
atherosclerosis. The trials identified significant benefit, in terms of stroke reduction, for CEA in patients
with specific levels of ICA stenosis. In particular, patients with symptomatic ICA stenosis >70% to 99%
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had dramatic benefit from CEA, whereas patients with symptomatic ICA stenosis between 50% and 69%
and patients with asymptomatic ICA stenosis between 60% and 99% also benefited, albeit to a lesser
extent, from CEA.
In the North American trials of CEA, ICA stenosis was calculated from arteriograms by comparing the
diameter of the minimal residual lumen to the diameter of the distal cervical ICA.13 The University of
Washington duplex criteria for categories of stenosis pre-existed the endarterectomy trials and were
developed comparing the diameter of the residual ICA lumen at its narrowest point with an estimate of
the diameter of the ICA bulb if it were free of atherosclerosis. Because the bulb has a greater diameter
than the distal ICA, the two methods of measurement do not give the same calculated percentage of
angiographic stenosis for the same lesion. Calculations of angiographic stenosis using the distal ICA as
the reference vessel result in lower calculated stenosis percentages than calculations using the bulb as
the reference site. This effect is particularly striking for modest lesions.
Table 87-1 Major Randomized Trials Assessing Efficacy of Carotid
Endarterectomy
In a review of 1,001 internal carotid angiograms, 34% of the ICAs were classified as stenosis of 70%
to 99% using the ICA bulb as the reference vessel. In contrast, when the distal cervical ICA was used as
the reference site, only 16% of the ICAs were classified as 70% to 99% stenosis.14 More than 99% of the
distal ICA-based calculations of stenosis were less than bulb-based calculations. Thus, the duplex stenosis
criteria using the bulb as the reference vessel are not and were not directly applicable to the results of
the clinical trials.
Current Criteria for ICA Stenosis
Since the randomized CEA trials were completed, additional duplex criteria were developed comparing
duplex scans to angiographic ICA stenosis using the distal ICA as the reference vessel in calculating
angiographic stenosis. Such criteria are considered more useful by many in selection of patients for
carotid intervention because they are directly applicable to the threshold levels of carotid stenosis
addressed in the CEA trials.
The initial studies addressing the issue of duplex criteria relevant to the CEA trials were performed at
the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU)5,15 with subsequent publications from many different
institutions, with many different proposed criteria for identification of clinically relevant threshold
levels of ICA stenosis.16–21
Recognizing that duplex criteria from different centers differed for the threshold levels of
angiographic stenosis determined by the CEA trials, a panel of authorities from a variety of medical
specialties assembled to review the carotid ultrasound literature. The panel developed a consensus
regarding the key components of the carotid ultrasound examination and reasonable criteria for
stratification of ICA stenosis.22
The consensus committee recommended that all carotid examinations be performed with grayscale
imaging, color Doppler, and spectral Doppler. Examinations should be performed by a credentialed
vascular technologist in accordance with the standards of an accrediting body. Doppler waveforms
should be measured with an insonation angle as close to 60 degrees as possible but not exceeding 60
degrees, and the sample volumes should be placed within the area of maximal stenosis. The panelists
recommended the consistent use of relatively broad diagnostic strata to estimate the degree of ICA
stenosis. The panel also concluded that Doppler is relatively inaccurate for subcategorizing ICA stenosis
<50%, and recommended that these lesions be reported under a single category as <50% stenosis, and
that subcategories for minor degrees of stenosis not be used.
4 The consensus panel noted that PSV is easy to obtain. However, data suggest reproducibility of PSV,
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even among experienced vascular technologists, has sufficient problems that PSVs should not be used as
a continuous variable in clinical carotid duplex scanning. Even so, the degree of stenosis estimated by
ICA PSV and the degree of narrowing of the ICA lumen seen on grayscale and color Doppler should
correlate with PSV as the primary parameters for determining ICA stenosis. Additional parameters such
as ICA/CCA PSV ratio and ICA EDV are secondary parameters and should be employed as internal
checks. They are especially useful when ICA PSV may not be representative of the extent of disease.
After their discussions the consensus panel recommended criteria, stratifying ICA stenosis into specific
categories relevant to the CEA trials (Table 87-2). These criteria have not been subjected to widespread
retrospective or prospective evaluation and do not represent the results of any one laboratory or study.
They are not meant to serve as a substitute for continuous quality assurance in individual laboratories.
BILATERAL HIGH-GRADE ICA STENOSIS
Doppler-derived flow velocities from the ICA opposite an ICA occlusion or high-grade stenosis may
suggest a higher degree of narrowing than is observed angiographically.2 This likely is because of
compensatory flow. Duplex scan overestimation of stenosis is more common in less-severe categories of
stenosis than in higher-severity categories.23
Table 87-2 Consensus Panel Recommendations for Classification of Internal
Carotid Artery Stenosis22
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Figure 87-8. Color flow image and velocity waveforms from a stented internal carotid artery. A peak systolic velocity of 120 cm/s
indicates the stent is widely patent. The stent itself is easily recognized as a hyperechoic stripe (arrow) parallel to the vessel wall.
Stented Carotid Arteries
Carotid artery stenosis may be selectively treated with an intraluminal stent. However, ultrasound
criteria developed for native ICAs are likely not applicable to stented carotid arteries, especially to
more modest lesions in the stented arteries. With rare exceptions the number of patients in studies of
stented carotid arteries that have actually had severe in-stent restenosis is small. No study has correlated
the degree of stenosis or increase in ICA velocities within a stented carotid artery with clinical
symptoms or outcomes. Studies have also not evaluated the effect of the stented carotid artery on the
opposite nonstented artery. It is generally agreed that PSVs >125 cm/s, will be needed to identify a
>50% stenosis in a stented ICA. Criteria to detect high-grade stenosis in native ICAs still work
reasonably well to identify high-grade stenosis in stented ICAs (Fig. 87-8).24,25
CCA and ECA Stenosis
Criteria used for classifying disease in the ICA have not been prospectively tested for application to the
ECA or the CCA. However, as with the ICA, relative degrees of stenosis may be determined by the
presence of plaque with B-mode imaging, aberration in color flow on duplex examination, spectral
broadening, and increases in PSV. Greater than 50% stenosis can be inferred by the presence of a focally
increased PSV followed by poststenotic turbulence. As noted above, the CCA waveform normally has
attributes of the ICA and ECA. The CCA will take on the quality of the “normal” vessel (ICA or ECA)
when the other is occluded. If there is a proximal CCA (or innominate artery) high-grade stenosis or
occlusion, the ipsilateral CCA Doppler flow quality will be dampened with low PSVs and delayed
upstroke of the waveform compared with the nonstenotic contralateral side. Poststenotic turbulence
also may be seen. There are no widely employed validated criteria to give a diameter reduction for
stenosis in the CCA or ECA. Greater than 50% stenosis in the ECA is often inferred by PSV >125 cm/s
associated with poststenotic turbulence whereas a PSV >200 cm/s may be an appropriate threshold for
>50% stenosis in the CCA.26
LOWER EXTREMITY ARTERIAL DISEASE
The noninvasive vascular laboratory, in combination with the history and physical examination, has a
critical role in providing objective diagnosis of lower extremity arterial occlusive disease in
asymptomatic patients, those with intermittent claudication, and in those with critical arterial
insufficiency. Both plethysmographic and ultrasound techniques are used in the evaluation of peripheral
arterial disease (PAD).
In many patients the clinical history and physical examination are all that is necessary to establish a
diagnosis of intermittent claudication (IC). Almost all patients with IC have diminished or absent lower
extremity pulses. However, palpation of pulses is subjective and poorly reproducible. Therefore, the
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pulse examination in a patient suspected of having arterial disease should be supplemented with
objective testing in the noninvasive vascular laboratory. On occasion a patient will give a history
suggesting IC, yet have what appear to be normal resting lower extremity pulses. In such cases, exercise
testing with postexercise Doppler-measured ankle pressures and ankle–brachial systolic blood pressure
ratios is crucial to confirm the diagnosis of IC secondary to arterial stenosis or occlusion (see below).
Many patients with PAD have atypical leg symptoms or are asymptomatic. Such patients have a
similar increased risk of cardiovascular death as patients with typical IC symptoms, leading some to
advocate for screening for PAD in patients with atypical leg symptoms or atherosclerotic risk factors.
Patients with exercise-induced lower extremity and/or buttock pain should be asked about the
location of their pain, its relationship to walking, severity and duration of symptoms, and symptom
progression over time. Only exercise-induced muscular pain of the calf, thigh, or buttock, relieved
within a few minutes of rest and reproduced by additional walking, can be predictably improved by
lower extremity arterial revascularization. There are no data on the response of atypical leg symptoms
to revascularization in patients with evidence of PAD.
Ischemic pain at rest is a clinical diagnosis. It is suspected when a patient complains of pain and/or
numbness in the forefoot, toes, or instep at rest. In such patients the vascular laboratory can objectively
confirm and quantify the magnitude of arterial insufficiency. Ischemic pain is generally associated with
an ankle pressure <50 mm Hg and an ABI ≤0.4.
PLETHYSMOGRAPHIC TECHNIQUES
Volume Flow
Calf or foot blood flow can be recorded with a mercury-in-silastic strain gauge. Electrical resistance of
the mercury column depends on the length of the column. Changes in electrical resistance, reflect
changes in the volume of the extremity, and are based on detection of minute changes in the length of
the column. However, neither calf nor foot blood flow at rest differ between normal subjects and
patients with even rather severe IC.27 Hyperemic volume flow is often lower in patients with occlusive
disease but such testing can be quite painful for the patient. Measurements of volume flow therefore are
not very useful in the evaluation of lower extremity ischemia.
Pulse Volume Recordings (PVR)
5 Air plethysmography can be used to display pulse volume waveforms. PVRs are obtained with
partially inflated blood pressure cuffs that detect volume changes sequentially down a limb. Volume
changes beneath the cuffs resulting from the pulse wave result in small pressure changes within the
cuffs. These changes are displayed as arterial waveforms with the use of appropriate transducers. A
normal pulse volume waveform has a sharp systolic upstroke and peak, as well as a prominent dichroic
notch on the downward portion of the curve. With increasing proximal arterial occlusion, the dichroitic
notch is lost and the waveform bows out on the down portion of the systolic portion of the curve. The
peak of the pulse wave also becomes rounded and there is loss of amplitude of the wave as disease is
more severe. With even more severe disease there are nearly equal upstroke and downstroke times and
in very severe proximal disease the pulse wave is absent (Fig. 87-9).28,29 An absence of quantitative data
limits the utility of PVRs. More quantitative data for the evaluation of lower extremity arterial disease
are available using ultrasound-based techniques.
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Figure 87-9. Pulse volume recordings. The plethysmographic waveforms are normal on the right and severely abnormal in the left
leg with loss of amplitude of the waveform, slowing of the upstroke of the waveform and outward bowing of the downstroke of
the waveform.
ULTRASOUND TECHNIQUES
Ankle–Brachial Index
6 The ankle–brachial index (ABI) is a very useful measure of overall lower extremity perfusion. The test
is performed with the patient supine and having rested for a few minutes. A pneumatic pressure cuff is
placed just above the ankle and inflated to supra systolic levels. A continuous wave Doppler probe is
positioned over the posterior tibial or dorsalis pedal artery distal to the cuff. The cuff is deflated and the
pressure reading when the Doppler signal returns is recorded. The sequence is repeated for the other
ankle artery and the values compared with the highest brachial artery systolic pressure also obtained
with the Doppler. For clinical purposes, the higher ipsilateral dorsal pedal or posterior tibial pressure is
divided by the higher brachial artery systolic pressure, yielding an ABI for that lower extremity. The use
of a ratio makes the test relatively independent of day-to-day variations in arterial blood pressure.
A normal ABI is 1.0 to 1.2, with progressively lower values corresponding to worsening arterial
disease (Table 87-3). ABIs below normal indicate relative lower extremity arterial insufficiency and
increased risk of cardiovascular death with the risk increasing with the magnitude of depression of the
ABI. This test has several limitations. Significant bilateral subclavian or axillary artery occlusive disease
results in a falsely elevated ABI. Calcified tibial arteries that can frequently occur with diabetes or renal
failure may be inadequately compressed by the pressure cuff. This also results in a falsely elevated
(supra systolic) ankle pressure. An ABI >1.4 should therefore also be considered abnormal. Such
patients often have severe arterial disease and are also at increased risk of cardiovascular death. When
the ABI may be falsely elevated, qualitative analysis of Doppler-derived analog or plethysmographic
waveforms or measurement of digital systolic pressures is a more appropriate indicator of the arterial
status of the lower extremity. Other problems with ABI include confusion with venous signals when the
ankle arterial pressure is low or unmeasurable and relative insensitivity to certain patterns of
progression of arterial disease. A tibial artery can occlude without a change in ABI if the remaining
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