| Literature DB >> 24102041 |
Kaoru Myouchin1, Katsutoshi Takayama, Toshiaki Taoka, Hiroyuki Nakagawa, Takeshi Wada, Masahiko Sakamoto, Satoru Iwasaki, Shinichiro Kurokawa, Kimihiko Kichikawa.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The present study aimed to identify the types of curved lesions that are difficult to place Carotid Wallstent (CWS).Entities:
Keywords: Carotid Wallstent; Carotid artery stenting; Inflection point; Lesion tortuosity
Year: 2013 PMID: 24102041 PMCID: PMC3790906 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1Tortuosity and inflection point. A. The inflection point is defined as the center of lesion curvature. B. Tortuosity is defined as the angle (θ) formed by 2 tangential lines drawn on the internal carotid artery side and the common carotid artery side starting from the inflection point.
Figure 2Stenosis site and inflection point. A. Type A lesion: lesion in which the distal end of the stenosis (arrow) is located proximal to the inflection point (arrowhead) at a distance ≥0.5 of a vertebral body based on the posterior height of the 3rd vertebral body (double arrow). B. Type B lesion: lesion in which the distal end (arrow) of the stenosis is located proximal to the inflection point (arrowhead) at a distance <0.5 of a vertebral body or located distal to the inflection point.
Figure 3Unsuccessful CWS placement (tortuosity 60°; type B lesion) (example 4). Right common carotid arteriogram. A. Severe stenosis observed at the origin of the right internal carotid artery. B. Guiding the 6-mm × 22-mm CWS (arrow). C. Stent placement (arrow). D. Stent shortening and migration distally to the lesion observed one minutes after placement (arrow). E. Guiding the 6-mm × 20-mm precise stent to overlap slightly with the proximal end of the CWS (arrow). F. Precise stent deployment (arrow). G. Postdilatation with a 5-mm-diameter balloon (arrow). H. Good dilatation observed on the arteriogram taken immediately afterwards.
Figure 4Unsuccessful CWS placement (tortuosity 72.9°; type B lesion) (example 5). Right common carotid arteriogram. A. Severe stenosis observed at the origin of the right internal carotid artery. B. Guiding the 10-mm × 24-mm CWS. C. Stent shortening proximally to the inflection point after placement (arrow). D. Postdilatation. E. Good dilatation observed on the arteriogram taken immediately afterwards.
Figure 5Successful CWS placement (tortuosity 93.8°; type A lesion) (example 2). Right common carotid arteriogram. A. Severe 84% stenosis accompanied by mild tortuosity observed at the origin of the right internal carotid artery. B. Guiding the 10-mm × 24-mm CWS (arrow). C. Postdilatation. D. Good dilatation observed on the arteriogram taken immediately afterwards.
Figure 6Successful CWS placement (tortuosity 102.6°; type B lesion) (example 1). Right common carotid arteriogram. A. Severe 99% stenosis accompanied by mild tortuosity observed at the origin of the right internal carotid artery. B. Guiding the 10-mm × 31-mm CWS (arrow). C. Postdilatation. D. Good dilatation observed on the arteriogram taken immediately afterwards.
Figure 7Successful CWS placement (tortuosity 92.4°; type B lesion) (example 3). Left common carotid arteriogram. A. Severe 80% stenosis accompanied by mild tortuosity observed at the origin of the left internal carotid artery. B Guiding the 8-mm × 21-mm CWS (arrow). C. Postdilatation. D. Good dilatation observed on the arteriogram taken immediately afterwards.
Stent placement success by tortuosity
| <90° | ≥90° | |
|---|---|---|
| Stent placement success | 0 | 29 |
| Stent placement failure | 2 | 0 |
P = 0.004.
Stent placement success by lesion type
| Type A | Type B | |
|---|---|---|
| Stent placement success | 22 | 7 |
| Stent placement failure | 0 | 2 |
P = 0.022.