Abstract
We (1) evaluated the effect of aspiration tubing diameter on intraluminal pressure and (2) compared thrombectomy outcomes in patients treated using small diameter tubing versus those treated using large diameter vacuum tubing. Intraluminal negative pressure was measured in a validated benchtop set up where consistency of negative pressure (inHg) was measured between static and dynamic aspiration. Static aspiration refers to activation of vacuum once the catheter is engaged with the clot. Dynamic aspiration refers to activation of vacuum when the catheter is slightly proximal to the clot. Four different sizes of vacuum tubing were trialed. We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients who underwent mechanical thrombectomy. Procedural and functional outcomes were compared. The large diameter aspiration tubing held a consistent high negative pressure in static and dynamic aspiration (p = 0.152). Tubing types I to III were associated with a significant fall off in negative pressure between static and dynamic technique (p < 0.05). Two-hundred and five patients were included in the retrospective analysis; 124 (60%) underwent thrombectomy using small diameter vacuum tubing, and 81 (40%) using the large tubing. Mean thrombectomy time was shorter with the larger tubing [25.9 (17.9) minutes] versus the small tubing [37.5 (28.5) minutes, p = 0.002]. A greater proportion of patients had a thrombolysis in cerebral infarction score ≥2b in the group treated using the large tubing (78, 99%) than those with the small tubing (96, 78%, p < 0.001). Vacuum tubing diameter is linearly associated with intraluminal aspiration pressure. These findings have clinical significance as shown by increased recanalization rates and decreased thrombectomy times when large-diameter aspiration tubing is used. Shifting the paradigm toward a flow-based technique using large-bore vacuum tubing ought to be considered.
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