Understanding perioperative risk determinants in carotid endarterectomy: the impact
of compromised circle of Willis morphology on inter-hemispheric blood flow indices
based on intraoperative internal carotid artery stump pulse pressure and backflow
patterns
Carotid artery stenosis (CAS) often requires surgical intervention through carotid
endarterectomy (CEA) to prevent stroke. Accurate cerebrovascular risk assessments
are crucial in CEA, as poor collateral circulation can lead to insufficient interhemispheric
blood flow compensation, resulting in ischemic complications. Therefore, understanding
perioperative risk determinants is vital. This study aims to determine the impact
of compromised circle of Willis (CoW) morphology on inter-hemispheric blood flow,
focusing on indices based on intraoperative internal carotid artery stump pulse pressure
and backflow patterns. In 80 CAS patients who underwent CEA, preoperative CT angiography
for CoW was conducted. Patients were categorized into five subgroups based on their
CoW anatomy and three additional groups based on intraoperative internal carotid artery
(ICA) stump backflow patterns evaluated by the surgeon. Continuous blood pressure
signals, including systolic, diastolic, mean, and pulse pressure values, were recorded
during the procedure. The relationship between CoW anatomical variants and the systolic
and diastolic segments of the averaged pressure waveforms, particularly diastolic
pressure decay, was analyzed. The correlation between CoW anatomy and stump backflow
intensity was also examined. Significant variability in ICA stump backflow and pressure
values was evident across CoW variants. Patients with compromised CoW morphology exhibited
weaker backflow patterns and lower ICA stump pulse pressure values, consistent with
impaired interhemispheric blood flow. Notably, ICA stump diastolic pressure decay
was consistent across most CoW variant groups, indicating developed collateral circulation
in cases with CoW anomalies. Thus, impaired CoW integrity is associated with compromised
interhemispheric blood flow indices based on intraoperative ICA stump pulse pressure
and backflow patterns during CEA. Integrating intraoperative pulse waveform analysis
with preoperative CT angiography provides a more detailed assessment of cerebrovascular
risk, guiding the selective use of shunts. This combined approach may improve surgical
outcomes and patient safety by identifying patients at increased risk of perioperative
neurological events due to CoW anomalies.