Slowing disease progression and removing blockages
The carotid arteries are the two large blood vessels in your neck that supply the brain with blood. We treat Carotid Artery Disease, which occurs when fatty plaque deposits cause the carotid arteries to narrow or become blocked, with a goal of keeping the disease from getting worse and preventing stroke.
The experts in our Vascular and Endovascular Program are leaders in treating carotid artery disease, including through endarterectomy, angioplasty, and stenting. We’ll work with you to evaluate and choose.
Medication and lifestyle changes
If your carotid artery disease is mild to moderate, lifestyle modifications may slow the progression of the disease. This can include quitting smoking, losing weight, eating healthy, and exercising regularly.
If lifestyle changes aren’t enough to slow the disease’s progression, your doctor may recommend medication to lower your blood pressure or cholesterol and prevent blood clots from forming.
Procedure
In more severe cases, your doctor may recommend a procedure to reopen the carotid artery in order to lower your risk of stroke. There are two options in which to do this: carotid Endarterectomy or angioplasty and stenting.
Carotid endarterectomy
This is the most common treatment for carotid artery disease. After being put under general anesthesia, your doctor will make an incision in your neck to reach the narrowed or blocked artery and reroute blood flow to the brain. They then will remove the plaque and repair the damaged portion of the artery. Finally, blood flow will be restored through its normal path.
The procedure should take about two hours, and you’ll need to stay overnight in the hospital.
Angioplasty and stenting
This is an alternative, minimally invasive approach that can be used if your blockage is too difficult to reach with endarterectomy or you have health conditions that make surgery too risky. In this procedure, you’ll be given a sedative to help you relax, but you’ll remain awake.
Your doctor will insert a thin, flexible tube known as a catheter through a blood vessel in your arm, groin, or neck and guide it to the blockage. A balloon at the end of the catheter will be inflated to widen the artery, and a small wire mesh tube called a stent will be inserted to act as a scaffold and keep the artery open.
The procedure should take about 1 hour and a half. You will need to stay overnight for monitoring.
Conditions
Carotid Artery Disease
Also known as carotid artery stenosis, occurs when fatty deposits known as plaque cause the carotid arteries to narrow or become blocked.
Carotid Body Tumor
A carotid body tumor, also known as a chemodectoma or paraganglioma, is a tumor located in the upper part of the neck where the two carotid arteries, which carry blood from the heart to the brain, branch into smaller blood vessels.
Extracranial Carotid Artery Aneurysm
An extracranial carotid artery aneurysm is a bulge that weakens the walls of the main artery in your neck and may create blood clots that can result in a stroke.
Tests
An angiogram is a special X-ray taken as a special dye is injected through a thin, flexible tube called a catheter to detect blockages or aneurysms in blood vessels.
Carotid duplex ultrasound uses Doppler and traditional ultrasound to assess blood flow in the arteries that supply blood to your brain.
Our providers
Location: Change location Enter your location
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Sonya Alekseyev, BSN FNPBC MSN
Vascular Surgery
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Suzanne M Benn, FNPBC MSN
Vascular Surgery
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Jason Ryan Crowner, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Joshua A Dearing, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Misaki Mikki Kiguchi, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Wendy S. Lobo, AGACNP-BC DNP MBA MSN
Anesthesiology & Vascular Surgery
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Marissa Mallari Magtanong, AGNP MSN
Vascular Surgery
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Krystal C. Maloni, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Kalyan Paudel, MBBS MD
Diagnostic Radiology & Interventional Radiology
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Mark O'Brien Peeler, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Kyle B. Reynolds, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Stephen Fulvio Stanziale, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Patricia B. Warble, ANPBC DNP MSN
Vascular Surgery
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Sajid Hussain Shah, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Richard A. Silva, MD
Vascular Surgery
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Kapil Simlote, MD
Vascular Surgery
Our locations
Distance from Change locationEnter your location
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center
9101 Franklin Square Dr. MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center Suite 212 Baltimore, MD 21237
443-777-1901
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital
3800 Reservoir Road Northwest Pasquerilla Healthcare Center Building 4 Washington, DC 20007
877-367-2434
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center
18101 Prince Philip Drive Suite 5200 Olney, MD 20832
410-657-1947
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar Southern Maryland Hospital Center
7503 Surratts Road Clinton, MD 20735
301-877-5637
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar Washington Hospital Center - Physician Office Building
106 Irving Street NW Physician Office Bldg. Suite 3150 North Tower Washington, DC 20010
202-877-0456
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar Union Memorial Hospital - Calvert Street Building
3300 North Calvert Street First Floor Baltimore, MD 21218
410-261-8226
MedStar Health: Vascular Surgery at MedStar St. Mary's Hospital
25500 Point Lookout Road Ste 200 Leonardtown, MD 20650
240-434-4022
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Insurance
MedStar Health accepts most major health insurance plans. If you are uncertain as to whether your individual health insurance plan is accepted at MedStar Health, please call your insurance company.