BackgroundFemoral access is the traditional approach for endovascular carotid artery stenting. Radial access is increasingly used as an alternative approach due to its known anatomical advantages in patients with unfavorable aortic arch morphology via the femoral approach and its excellent access site safety profile. Our objective was to analyze procedural success using radial access for carotid artery stenting as reported in the literature.MethodsThree online databases were systematically searched following PRISMA guidelines for studies (n ≥20) using radial artery access for carotid artery stenting (1999–2018). Random-effects meta-analysis was used to pool the procedural success (successful stent placement with no requirement for crossover to femoral access), mortality, and complication rates associated with radial access.ResultsSeven eligible studies reported procedural success outcomes with a pooled meta-analysis rate of 90.8% (657/723; 95% CI 86.7% to 94.2%; I2=53.1%). Asymptomatic radial artery occlusion occurred in 5.9% (95% CI 4.1% to 8.0%; I2=0%) and forearm hematoma in 1.4% (95% CI 0.4% to 2.9%; I2=0%). Risk of minor stroke/transient ischemic attack was 1.9% (95% CI 0.6% to 3.8%; I2=42.3%) and major stroke was 1.0% (95% CI 0.4% to 1.8%; I2=0%). There were three deaths across the seven studies (0.6%; 95% CI 0.2% to 1.3%; I2=0%). The meta-analysis was limited by statistically significant heterogeneity for the primary outcome of procedural success.ConclusionRadial access for carotid artery stenting has a high procedural success rate with low rates of mortality, access site complications, and cerebrovascular complications. The potential benefits of this approach in patients with unfavorable aortic arch access should be explored in a prospective randomized trial.
Objective: In aspiration thrombectomy, a 60-mL syringe has a higher aspiration force than a 20 inHg aspiration pump. The recommended pressure of a new pump (Penumbra Pump MAX) is 28.5 inHg. We evaluated and compared the negative pressure flow rates during aspiration from locked syringes to the Penumbra Pump MAX. We also sought to determine how an increase in syringe volume affects the duration and volume of aspiration phases. Methods: A Penumbra Pump MAX, a 60-mL VacLok negative pressure syringe, and a 100-mL syringe were used as negative pressure generators and were connected to catheters. The pump was allowed to reach its peak negative pressure at 28.5 inHg before aspiration. The 100-mL syringe was pulled to 60, 70, 80, and 90 mL and locked. The mean flow rates (mL/s) and standard deviations were calculated. Results: The 60-mL syringe created higher flow rates than the Penumbra Pump MAX at 28.0 inHg (5.51 vs. 5.01 mL/s). Every 10 mL increase in syringe volume extended the plateau phase by 2 s without altering the flow rate, acceleration phase, or deceleration phase. Conclusion: The aspiration power of the two negative pressure generators was comparable. Increasing syringe volume directly increases the effective aspiration time.
Introduction: Age is a predictor of functional outcome after acute ischemic stroke (AIS). Frailty increases with age and comorbidities, and imaging markers of brain-frailty (e.g. atrophy, small-vessel-disease) are associated with outcomes. However, the extent to which the association of age and 90-day outcome is mediated by brain-frailty is unknown. We explored this mediation in AIS patients receiving endovascular therapy (EVT), with a particular interest in neuroimaging. Methods: In this post-hoc analysis of the ESCAPE-NA1 trial, in which all patients underwent EVT, we assessed brain atrophy (subcortical/cortical), white-matter disease (periventricular/deep) and the number of lacunes and chronic infarctions. Structural equation modelling (SEM) was used to create 3 latent variables: “imaging-frailty” (above-mentioned markers), “clinical-frailty” (e.g. pre-stroke mRS, cardiovascular risk factors, cancer) and “total-frailty” (imaging + clinical markers). We created 3 models ( figure1) including each latent variable as a potential mediator of the association of age and 90-day outcome, adjusting for baseline ASPECTS, NIHSS, onset-to-puncture-time, nerinetide and alteplase. Results: Among 1,092 patients, the indirect effect of age on 90-day outcome, mediated by imaging-frailty, contributed 96% of the total effect(β=0.047;p=0.02), while the indirect effect through clinical-frailty accounted for only 21%(β=0.01;p=0.001) of the total effect. When including both frailty constructs, the indirect pathway accounted for 86% of the total effect(β=0.06;p<0.01). These proportions were similar when imaging features were assessed on MRI. Conclusions: Brian frailty mediates the association of age and 90-day outcome after EVT, with most of the effect mediated by imaging as opposed to clinical markers of frailty. This work underscores the importance of considering brain-frailty, as opposed to chronological age alone, in predicting post-stroke outcomes.
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