Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate whether morphological evidence of intracranial vascular injury can be found in the occluding thrombi of patients with ischemic stroke. From 2015 until 2018 specimens of thrombi from patients with large vessel occlusion treated either by stent-assisted aspiration thrombectomy (TE) or by aspiration thrombectomy were prospectively collected. Thrombus specimens were formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded and stained. Architectural features, presence of parts of vessel wall or atheromatous material, organisation of the thrombi, technique and number of thrombectomy manoeuvers were evaluated. Thrombus specimens from 302 patients were analyzed. 238 (80%) patients were treated with stent-assisted aspiration TE and 64 (20%) patients with aspiration TE only. 286 (95%) had fresh thrombi, 14 (4.6%) showed initial/complete thrombus organisation and multi-staged thrombi were found in 2 (<1%) patients. In 8 patients (2.6%) we found atypical thrombus content after a time interval longer 6 hours after onset and final thrombectomy manoeuvre: 4 with atheromatous material and 4 with parts of a vessel wall. In 1 patient with parts of vessel wall angiographically a dissection was detected. No parts of the vessel wall were found after sole aspiration thrombectomy. The overall risk of arterial vessel wall injury aspiration thrombectomy was low in our study. Aspiration thrombectomy and the procedure related with a retrieving device together with an ischemia time longer than 6 hours may increase the risk of vessel injury through the thrombectomy procedure. Further investigations are necessary to elucidate the influence of the mentioned aspects.

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