Abstract

Blood flow management in the carotid artery during mechanical thrombectomy is crucial for safety and effectiveness. There is an ongoing discussion about whether balloon-guide catheters or large-bore sheaths are needed for effective flow management. We compared general flow characteristics of proximal aspiration through a large-bore sheath and a balloon-guide catheter in a porcine in vivo model. We investigated blood flow in a porcine common carotid artery with and without aspiration (VacLok syringe and Penumbra pump, Pump MAX) through an 8F-long sheath and an 8F balloon-guide catheter. Blood hemodynamics were assessed via continuous duplex sonography. Average vessel diameter and baseline blood flow were 4.4 ± 0.2 mm and 244 ± 20 mL/min, respectively. For the 8F sheath, pump aspiration resulted in a significant flow reduction (225 ± 25 mL/min, P < .001), but with a persisting antegrade stream. Manual aspiration resulted in collapse of the vessel in 2 of 7 measurements and oscillatory flow with antegrade systolic and retrograde diastolic components in the remaining 5 measurements. Net flow was antegrade (52 ± 44 mL/min) in 3 and retrograde (-95 ± 52 mL/min) in the remaining 2 measurements. For balloon-guide catheters, balloon inflation always resulted in flow arrest. Additional pump or manual aspiration resulted in significant flow reversal of -1100 ± 230 and -468 ± 46 mL/min, respectively (both, P < .001). Only balloon-guide catheters allow reliable blood flow arrest and flow reversal in combination with aspiration via syringes or high-flow pump systems. Aspiration through an 8F sheath results in either collapse of the vessel or oscillatory flow, which can result in a net antegrade or retrograde stream.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEBlood flow management in the carotid artery during mechanical thrombectomy is crucial for safety and effectiveness

  • Additional pump or manual aspiration resulted in significant flow reversal of Ϫ1100 Ϯ 230 and Ϫ468 Ϯ 46 mL/min, respectively

  • Endovascular mechanical thrombectomy has been established as the standard treatment option for acute ischemic stroke caused by large-vessel occlusion.[1]

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Summary

Methods

We investigated blood flow in a porcine common carotid artery with and without aspiration (VacLok syringe and Penumbra pump, Pump MAX) through an 8F-long sheath and an 8F balloon-guide catheter. We investigated flow in a porcine common carotid artery (CCA) with and without aspiration through a large-bore sheath and a BGC. We chose the CCA because its diameter is comparable with that of the human ICA.[15] We adapted flow in the CCA, which has a physiologic blood flow that is twice as high the human ICA blood flow, by injecting blood clots into the subsequent arteries This procedure was repeated until a blood flow between 200 and 280 mL/min was achieved in the target vessel. We assessed blood flow via duplex sonography (LOGIQ S8; GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) by measuring vessel diameter and flow speed using the built-in software and GraphClick software (Arizona Software, Neuchatel, Switzerland)

Results
Discussion
Conclusion

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