Age and sex-specific associations of carotid pulsatility with small vessel disease burden in transient ischemic attack and ischemic stroke

Abstract

Background and Purpose Although large artery stiffness has been implicated in the pathogenesis of cerebral small vessel disease (SVD), whether carotid pulsatility, a convenient surrogate marker of arterial stiffness, is similarly associated with global burden of SVD is unknown. Methods We studied consecutive patients with TIA or non-disabling ischaemic stroke from the Oxford Vascular Study who had a brain MRI and carotid duplex ultrasound during 2002-2014. We determined clinical correlates of common carotid (CCA) and internal carotid artery (ICA) pulsatility index (PI) and their associations with the Total SVD Score on MRI, stratified by age (median=72). Results In 587 patients, CCA and ICA-PI were both independently associated with age, diabetes and premorbid mean pulse pressure after adjustment for age, sex and cardiovascular risk factors (all p&lt;0.05). ICA-PI was strongly associated with SVD markers and burden, particularly lacunes, in patients aged&lt;70 (age and sex-adjusted OR of top vs. bottom PI quartile: 5.35, 1.95-14.70, p=0.001; increasing SVD Score:2.30, 1.01-5.25, p=0.048), but not in patients aged≥70 (p&gt;0.05). No associations between CCA-PI with SVD Score were noted at any age. In 94 consecutive patients who also received transcranial Doppler ultrasound, strong associations between middle cerebral artery (MCA)-PI and an increasing SVD Score was noted (unadjusted OR - MCA:4.26,1.45-12.55, p=0.009; ICA:2.37,0.81-6.87, p=0.11; CCA:1.33,0.45-3.96, p=0.61). Conclusions ICA and MCA-PI are associated with global SVD burden, especially in individuals aged&lt;70 and may be causally related.</p

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