Vulnerable carotid arterial plaque causing repeated ischemic stroke can be detected with B-mode ultrasonography as a mobile component: Jellyfish sign

Neurosurgical Review Volume 33 Issue 4 Page 419-430 published_at 2010-10
アクセス数 : 941
ダウンロード数 : 348

今月のアクセス数 : 0
今月のダウンロード数 : 0
File
NeurosurgRev_33_419.pdf 1.28 MB 種類 : fulltext
Title ( eng )
Vulnerable carotid arterial plaque causing repeated ischemic stroke can be detected with B-mode ultrasonography as a mobile component: Jellyfish sign
Creator
Kume Shinji
Yamane Kanji
Wada Seishi
Nishida Toshihiro
Source Title
Neurosurgical Review
Volume 33
Issue 4
Start Page 419
End Page 430
Abstract
Mobile plaque is associated with increased risk of ischemic stroke, but definitions have remained unclear. We have previously reported that carotid ultrasonography can detect the mobile component of the carotid plaque surface, which rises and falls in a manner inconsistent with arterial pulsatile wall motion (Jellyfish sign). However, clinical and pathological features of Jellyfish sign remain unclear. The subjects comprised of 165 patients with carotid plaque and degree of area stenosis >= 50% on ultrasonography. Using magnetic resonance imaging, we quantified intraplaque hemorrhage (IPH) and defined ischemic stroke in each patient. Fifteen surgical specimens were obtained by carotid endarterectomy, and pathological features (area of fibrous cap and intraplaque atheromatous lesion) were compared with ultrasonographic plaque surface movement rate. Carotid plaques with IPH were seen in 78 cases, with Jellyfish sign in 31 cases. Jellyfish sign was not detected in patients without IPH. In these 15 patients, the fibrous cap covered the atheromatous lesion, and cap thickness correlated negatively with Jellyfish-positive plaque surface movement rate. Kaplan-Meier and Cox multiple regression analysis demonstrated that the most important predictor of ischemic stroke during follow-up is Jellyfish sign, not IPH. Stroke events in patients with Jellyfish sign repeated within a short interval after diagnosis. Jellyfish sign on ultrasonography is a sign of high-risk plaque vulnerability, suggesting rupture of the fibrous cap associated with the release of thrombogenic factors into the arterial lumen, and resulting in repeated ischemic stroke during a short interval after diagnosis.
Keywords
Jellyfish sign
Mobile plaque
Plaque rupture
Stroke
Ultrasonography
NDC
Medical sciences [ 490 ]
Language
eng
Resource Type journal article
Publisher
springer
Date of Issued 2010-10
Rights
Copyright (c) 2010 Springer
Publish Type Author’s Original
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com
[ISSN] 0344-5607
[DOI] 10.1007/s10143-010-0270-9
[NCID] AA00324143
[DOI] http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10143-010-0270-9