Last reviewed · How we verify

NCT04442074: DIADOP

Characteristics in Doppler Ultrasound of the Carotid Diaphragm Responsible for an Ischemic Stroke

Status unknown Last updated 27 April 2023
What this trial tests

trial in Stroke in 15 participants. Status unknown.

Timeline
13 June 2020
Primary endpoint
31 December 2023
31 December 2023

Quick facts

Lead sponsorFondation Hôpital Saint-Joseph
StatusStatus unknown
Study typeOBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment15
Start date13 June 2020
Primary completion31 December 2023
Estimated completion31 December 2023
Sites1 location across France

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Fondation Hôpital Saint-Joseph — full company profile →

Who can join

Adults 18 to 65, any sex, with Stroke. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Sponsor's own description

Carotid diaphragms are a non-atheromatous arterial cause of cerebral infarction, especially in young people (≤65 years old). This anomaly is more common in the African or African-American population, although it is more and more often discovered in young Caucasians. This cause of cerebrovascular accident (CVA), known until the 1970s, was later forgotten until a recent revival of interest, probably in connection with the improvement of imagery but also by the discovery that these lesions have a high rate of recurrence in the absence of interventional care. In a Brazilian study, the carotid diaphragm was reported in 10% of patients under the age of 60. The carotid diaphragm is a non-atheromatous overgrowth of the intima of the arterial wall. It appears in imagery in the form of an endoluminal web wider than it is tall. Its preferred seat is the carotid bulb. It is a source, by an embologenic mechanism, of cerebral infarction starting from local thrombus developed within large cerebral arteries. In histology, the lesions are different from atherosclerosis and characterized by a thickening of the intima with proliferation of loose and strewed spindle cells mainly involving the intima. An atheromatous plaque or dissection with detachment of the intima are the two main differential diagnoses of the carotid web. However, the appearance of a diaphragm implanted on a regular wall and the absence of any other localization of atheroma distinguish the lesion of the carotid web from that of a focal atheromatous plate. In addition, the very proximal localization of the carotid web, from the emergence of the internal carotid artery, does not suggest a dissection, the localization of which is usually downstream of the bulb. The baseline exam to detect a carotid diaphragm is a carotid angiography scan, but the abnormalities are often inconspicuous, making diagnosis difficult. We can be led in case of doubt to perform a conventional arteriography, which remains the "gold standard". The latter, dynamic examination compared to the CT scan, shows above all a stasis of blood flow in the recess created by the diaphragm, stasis at the origin of the formation of thrombi. It has been suspected that the maximum risk of infarction is upon waking, at the time of verticalization, with mobilization of the thrombus. Therapeutically, the discovery of a symptomatic carotid diaphragm (ischemic swallowing accident) justifies radical treatment. The risk of recurrence of a patient on antithrombotic (antiplatelet or anticoagulant) being too high, it is proposed either surgery, or carotid angioplasty with stent placement. No comparative study of the 2 techniques has been carried out. Besides radiological examinations, ultrasound is another technique for studying the cervical arteries. It is reputed to be of little contribution in the search for a carotid diaphragm, but few publications exist to date even though the cervical Doppler is often the first arterial examination carried out after an ischemic stroke. Two series reported Doppler ultrasound data in the carotid diaphragm. A recent retrospective study evaluated, in multimodal imaging \[Doppler, CT scan of the Supra-Aortic Trunks (ASD) and conventional arteriography\], 30 patients (60 carotids) with diaphragm or atherosclerosis. The correlation between conventional arteriography and CT angiography was perfect, but the correlation between Doppler and CT angiography for diaphragm diagnosis was moderate. In another series studying 15 diaphragms diagnosed by CT angiography, the retrospective analysis of doppler reports revealed that 40% were considered normal and 60% mentioned nonspecific hyperechoic lesions, but this work remained in the form of a presentation. at a congress. With the improvement of the technique and the resolution of the Doppler ultrasound as well as the knowledge of the particular ultrasound characteristics, it seems to us that this examination could regain a place in the diagnosis of the pathology. The carotid diaphragm is also largely unknown to vascular doctors practicing cervical Doppler ultrasound. This descriptive study of the diagnostic contribution of the echo-doppler for a carotid diaphragm has for perspective the establishment of a prospective study of the contribution of a combined expertise angiologist-neurologist in the echo-Doppler for patients \<60 years hospitalized for an ischemic stroke.

Publications & conference data

No peer-reviewed publications indexed yet for this trial.

Verify or expand the search:

Other recruiting trials for Stroke

Currently open trials in the same condition.

Other Fondation Hôpital Saint-Joseph trials

Trials by the same sponsor.

Verify against primary sources

Data sources for this page

Drug Landscape aggregates and links these public records for informational use only. Always verify against the primary source before clinical or regulatory decisions. Canonical URL: https://druglandscape.com/trial/NCT04442074.

Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing