Abstract

Acute ischemic stroke occurs when a blood clot occludes a cerebral artery. Mechanical interventions, primarily stent retrievers and aspiration thrombectomy, are used currently for removing the occluding clot and restoring blood flow. Aspiration involves using a long catheter to traverse the cerebral vasculature to reach the blood clot, followed by application of suction through the catheter bore. Aspiration is also used in conjunction with other techniques such as stent retrievers and balloon guide catheters. Despite the wide use of aspiration, our physical understanding of the process and the causes of the failure of aspiration to retrieve cerebral clots in certain scenarios is not well understood. Experimental and computational studies can help develop the capability to provide deeper insights into the procedure and enable development of new devices and more effective treatment methods. We recapitulate the aspiration-based thrombectomy techniques in clinical practice and provide a perspective of existing engineering methods for aspiration. We articulate the current knowledge gap in the understanding of aspiration and highlight possible directions for future engineering studies to bridge this gap, help clinical translation of engineering studies, and develop new patient-specific stroke therapy.

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