Publication | Open Access
Duplex Doppler and spectral flow analysis of racial differences in cerebrovascular atherosclerosis.
44
Citations
20
References
1990
Year
HypertensionVascular DiseaseDoppler Spectral AnalysisLess StenosisRacial DifferencesVascular ImagingDuplex DopplerNeurologyPublic HealthAtherosclerosisRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingCardiovascular EpidemiologyMedicineSpectral Flow AnalysisVascular BiologyCerebral Blood FlowEpidemiologyCarotid Duplex UltrasonographyCardiovascular DiseaseArterial DiseaseStroke
We compared carotid artery disease in 99 black and 106 white patients using duplex ultrasonography (B-mode imaging and Doppler spectral analysis). Blacks had significantly less stenosis of the extracranial internal carotid artery than whites. Among the risk factors investigated, hypertension alone, ischemic heart disease, diabetes mellitus, and smoking failed to explain the racial difference. Although carotid stenosis of greater than or equal to 40% correlated significantly with age in both races (p = 0.001 in whites and p = 0.005 in blacks), blacks had significantly less carotid stenosis of any degree even when age was taken into account. Multivariate analysis showed that race is a significant and independent risk factor for carotid stenosis (p less than 0.0001). Hypertension interacting with race was also significant. Our results require verification in population-based studies. Carotid duplex ultrasonography offers a noninvasive method for carrying out such studies.
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