| Literature DB >> 32166203 |
Gary B Rajah1,2, Bryan Lieber3, Ari D Kappel3, Ali W Luqman3,4.
Abstract
Recent trends in neuroendovascular surgery have seen a rise in alternative access utilization. Social media feeds such as #RadialFirst or #RadialForNeuro are the beacons of a growing movement among more and more endovascular neurosurgeons, as they venture away from the traditional femoral access gravitating toward radial access. We have previously shown our distal radial access technique utilizing the snuffbox to be a reliable means of endovascular access and in addition to traditional ventral radial access provides access to the entire cerebrum. Stroke thrombectomy often encounters reticence from those who prefer transfemoral access over the radial access. Thrombectomy has been performed radially in a few series and only once previously in a case report of distal radial access for thrombectomy. Hesitance to adopt radial access for mechanical thrombectomy is often related to perceived increased access times and a lack of suitable balloon guide catheters for radial techniques. Here, we present one of the first descriptions of a distal transradial access with balloon guide flow arrest for stentriever thrombectomy. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Distal transradial access; radial; stroke; thrombectomy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32166203 PMCID: PMC7045539 DOI: 10.4103/bc.bc_22_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Circ ISSN: 2394-8108
Figure 1A 73-year-old female with National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale 18 L middle cerebral artery distal M1 clot, posttissue plasminogen activator. (a) Coronal computed tomographic angiography image depicting the common origin left carotid artery from a type 2 arch. (b) Axial computed tomographic angiography revealing distal M1 cutoff. (c) Axial computed tomography perfusion images revealing increased Tmax (green). (d) Axial computed tomography perfusion images revealing decreased cerebral blood volume. (e) Axial computed tomography perfusion images revealing decreased cerebral blood volume or core size
Figure 2Distal radial (snuffbox) access. (a and b) 7-Fr glide slender sheath in the snuffbox with a 6+ Cello Balloon Guide placed coaxially through. (c) PrecludeSync Distal Radial Band designed for the distal radial or snuffbox compression
Figure 3Distal radial access and guide placement. (a) 7-Fr glideslender snuff box sheath roadmap demonstrating minimal radial spasm. (b) Navigation under native images of the glide advantage wire. (c) Selecting the left common origin with the glide advantage wire and advancing the Cello into the left carotid artery
Figure 4Distal radial artery balloon guide-assisted thrombectomy. (a) Native anteroposterior cervical/cranial images revealing the Cello in the high cervical internal carotid artery. (b and c) Anteroposterior and lateral left internal carotid artery injection revealing a M2 superior division occlusion and perfusion deficit with contrast stasis at origin (arrow). (d and e) Oblique left internal carotid artery injection better revealing the occluded M2 branch with perfusion deficit. (f) Anteroposterior M3 middle cerebral artery microrun demonstrating the catheter within the target territory and beyond the clot
Figure 5Distal radial artery balloon guide-assisted thrombectomy. (a) Cello Balloon guide inflated in the high cervical internal carotid artery providing flow arrest during device retrieval and aspiration postdevice and clot removal. (b and c) The anteroposterior and lateral final runs after the thrombectomy reveal two M2 from a superior division trunk now seen (arrow) in addition to the frontal parietal M2–M4 branches previously not seen