Carotid Artery Disease – Stroke

CAROTID ARTERY DISEASE & STROKE RISK

Carotid artery disease happens when plaque narrows the arteries that carry blood to the brain. It may not cause symptoms until blood flow is reduced or a warning sign of stroke occurs, so evaluation focuses on risk, imaging, and timely treatment planning.

Evaluation & Next Steps

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Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm

Quick Summary

Key Takeaway: Carotid artery disease can raise the risk of stroke, especially when narrowing becomes severe or warning symptoms occur.
Many people with carotid artery disease do not feel symptoms at first. Care planning depends on imaging results, degree of narrowing, stroke or TIA history, medical risk factors, and whether vascular intervention should be considered.

Carotid Artery Disease Overview

What is Carotid Artery Disease?

Carotid artery disease is narrowing or blockage in the carotid arteries, usually from plaque buildup. These arteries run through the neck and help supply blood to the brain.

Why Evaluation Matters

Evaluation helps determine how much narrowing is present, whether symptoms suggest a transient ischemic attack or stroke, and whether monitoring, medical management, or vascular treatment planning is appropriate.

Carotid Artery Disease Symptoms

Carotid artery disease may be silent until a stroke warning sign occurs. Symptoms should be taken seriously because they may reflect reduced blood flow to the brain.

No Early Symptoms

Many patients have no noticeable symptoms before carotid narrowing is found on an exam or imaging study.

TIA Symptoms

Temporary weakness, numbness, speech trouble, or vision changes may be warning signs of a transient ischemic attack.

Vision Changes

Sudden vision loss, blurred vision, or a curtain-like shadow in one eye can be a warning symptom.

Weakness or Numbness

Sudden weakness, facial droop, numbness, or coordination changes on one side of the body need urgent evaluation.

Seek care now if…

Seek emergency care for sudden facial drooping, arm weakness, speech difficulty, confusion, severe dizziness, sudden vision loss, or symptoms that suggest stroke or TIA, even if they improve.

Causes & Risk Factors

Carotid artery disease usually develops over time as plaque builds inside the artery wall. Risk is influenced by cardiovascular health, medical history, and lifestyle factors.

Common Causes

Plaque can narrow the artery or create an unstable surface where clots may form. The degree of narrowing and any neurologic symptoms guide the urgency of evaluation and treatment planning.

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

Diagnosis focuses on measuring carotid narrowing, reviewing stroke or TIA symptoms, and understanding the patient’s overall vascular risk.

Typical Evaluation

What to Bring

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on the degree of narrowing, whether symptoms have occurred, overall stroke risk, and the patient’s medical profile. The goal is to reduce future stroke risk while choosing the safest appropriate care pathway.
Related care may include medication optimization, vascular imaging follow-up, risk-factor management, and vascular procedure discussion when carotid narrowing or symptoms make intervention appropriate.

Risk Management

Monitoring & Symptom Protection

Vascular Treatment Options

Follow-Up Evaluation

Recovery & Follow-Up

Recovery and long-term management depend on whether carotid disease is monitored, treated medically, or managed with a vascular procedure. Follow-up focuses on reducing stroke risk over time.

What Helps Most

  • Taking medications exactly as directed
  • Managing blood pressure and cholesterol consistently
  • Keeping imaging follow-up when surveillance is recommended
  • Reporting neurologic symptoms immediately
  • Coordinating care with vascular and primary care teams

When to Follow Up

  • Stroke-like symptoms occur, even if they resolve
  • Carotid narrowing progresses on imaging
  • Medication side effects or changes need review
  • Blood pressure or cholesterol remains difficult to control
  • Procedure options need to be discussed
  • Post-treatment surveillance is due

Frequently Asked Questions

Carotid artery disease is narrowing or blockage in the neck arteries that supply blood to the brain, usually caused by plaque buildup.

Yes. Severe narrowing or unstable plaque may increase stroke risk, especially when symptoms of TIA or stroke have occurred.

Sudden facial drooping, arm weakness, speech trouble, vision loss, confusion, dizziness, or one-sided numbness should be treated as urgent warning signs.

Diagnosis may include symptom review, vascular risk assessment, carotid ultrasound, and CTA or MRA when more detail is needed.

No. Treatment depends on the degree of narrowing, symptoms, overall risk, and whether monitoring, medication, or intervention is appropriate.

Monitoring may include repeat carotid imaging, medication review, risk-factor management, and follow-up if symptoms or imaging findings change.

Locations

LVVIS offers vein evaluation and treatment planning at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.

LVVIS West Side Consultation Office

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Consultations and vascular evaluations

LV2 Limb & Vascular Division

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care

LVVIS East Procedure Office

2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119

Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care

LVVIS West Side Surgical Center

6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Advanced vascular and interventional procedures