Balloon-guide catheters are needed for effective flow reversal during mechanical thrombectomy

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: 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. MATERIALS AND 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. Blood hemodynamics were assessed via continuous duplex sonography. RESULTS: 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). CONCLUSIONS: 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.

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Nikoubashman, O., Wischer, D., Hennemann, H. M., Sandmann, J., Sichtermann, T., Müschenich, F. S., … Wiesmann, M. (2018). Balloon-guide catheters are needed for effective flow reversal during mechanical thrombectomy. American Journal of Neuroradiology, 39(11), 2077–2081. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5829

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