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Unstable plaques are characterized by lower segmental stiffness and intimal neovascularization compared to stable plaques. Our objective is to determine the capacity of the elastographic parameters obtained by the UF to discriminate the unstable to the stable plaques. We hope to improve the stroke prediction in asymptomatic patients with carotid stenosis.
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Context
Stroke is the second leading cause of death in the Western world and the leading cause of major disability in the long term. About 15% of strokes are secondary to thrombosis or embolization of an unstable atherosclerotic plaque of the carotid bifurcation. In these symptomatic patients, the degree of carotid stenosis is correlated with the risk of early recurrence. In patients with stenosis (NASCET)> 70%, endarterectomy is an intervention aimed at removing the carotid plaque to prevent stroke. In asymptomatic patients, the degree of stenosis is a limited predictive factor and a better risk stratification is required to assess the degree of the plaque vulnerability. The therapeutic decision towards endarterectomy in addition to drug therapy is debated because of a variable benefit/ risk balance. Several imaging parameters were studied: anfractuosity, heterogeneity, and vascularization of the plaque for example, without allowing a modification of the current recommendations. Our objective is to improve the evaluation of the risk of stroke by the fine characterization of the carotid stenosis to help the medical decision. We want to evaluate a new ultrasound imaging technology called Ultrafast ultrasound imaging (UF). Ultrasound has the advantage of being a non-irradiating, low-cost easily accessible.
Hypotheses
Unstable plaques are characterized by lower segmental stiffness and intimal neovascularization compared to stable plaques. Our objective is to determine the capacity of the elastographic parameters obtained by the UF to discriminate the unstable to the stable plaques. We hope to improve the stroke prediction in asymptomatic patients with carotid stenosis.
Innovative aspects
The originality of the approach is the use of an advanced imaging technique, UF, developed by the Langevin Institute with Mathias Fink, and already validated in the study of arterial stiffness with pulse wave analysis .
This project for the application of UF in atherosclerotic plaques stems from the ability to analyze the biomechanical properties of tissues by ultrasound elastography, already developed in the breast, liver and thyroid. Not only does UF determine the tissue stiffness expressed in kPa (Young's modulus) of the arterial wall and therefore of the carotid plaque, but UF also offers the possibility of establishing a rigidity mapping at the μm3 scale And therefore to approach the variability of the rigidity inside the plaque.
Moreover, following the recent development of the Doppler UF by the Langevin Institute, the capabilities of this tool in the precise detection of microvascular flows make it a cutting-edge tool adapted to the study of the vascularization of the carotid plaque As well as the study of the hemodynamic shear stresses that apply to the surface of the plaque.
Objective
Our objective is the development and validation of informative biomarkers of the carotid plaque stability by UF in order to improve the stroke prediction in case of asymptomatic stenosis. A UF-ultrasound approach is a non-irradiating, easily accessible, and low cost technique.
The primary objective of this study is:
The secondary objectives are:
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