scholarly journals Development of a recalcitrant, large clot burden, bifurcation occlusion model for mechanical thrombectomy

2017 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. E6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Visish M. Srinivasan ◽  
Stephen R. Chen ◽  
Kevin M. Camstra ◽  
Gouthami Chintalapani ◽  
Peter Kan

OBJECTIVE Stroke is a major cause of disability and death in adults. Several large randomized clinical trials have shown the significant benefit of mechanical thrombectomy with modern stent retrievers in the treatment of large-vessel occlusions. However, large clots located at bifurcations remain challenging to treat. An in vivo model of these recalcitrant clots needs to be developed to test future generations of devices. METHODS Autologous blood was drawn from anesthetized swine via a femoral sheath. Blood was then mixed with thrombin, calcium chloride, and saline, and injected into silicone tubing to form cylindrical clots in the standard fashion. Matured clots were then delivered in an unfragmented fashion directly into the distal extracranial vasculature, at branch points where vessel sizes mimic the human middle cerebral artery, by using Penumbra aspiration tubing and the Penumbra ACE68 reperfusion catheter. RESULTS A total of 5 adult swine were used to develop the model. The techniques evolved during experiments in the first 3 animals, and the last 2 were used to establish the final model. In these 2 swine, a total of 8 autologous clots, 15–20 mm, were injected directly into 8 distal extracranial vessels at branch points to mimic a bifurcation occlusion in a human. All clots were delivered directly at a distal bifurcation or trifurcation in an unfragmented fashion to cause an occlusion. Ten revascularization attempts were made, and none of the branch-point occlusions were fully revascularized on the first attempt. CONCLUSIONS Using novel large-bore distal access catheters, large unfragmented clots can be delivered into distal extracranial vessels in a swine occlusion model. The model mimics the clinical situation of a recalcitrant bifurcation occlusion and will be valuable in the study of next-generation stroke devices and in training settings.

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 915-923 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jungshan Chang ◽  
Patricia A. Shi ◽  
Elaine Y. Chiang ◽  
Paul S. Frenette

Previous studies using intravital microscopy in a sickle cell disease (SCD) mouse model suggest that adherent white blood cells (WBCs) play a key role in vaso-occlusion by capturing circulating red blood cells (RBCs) in venules. Commercial intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) given before the inflammatory stimuli increased microcirculatory blood flow and survival. To mimic the clinical situation in which SCD patients seek medical attention after the onset of symptoms, we developed an in vivo model in which the therapeutic intervention (eg, IVIG) was administered after in the inflammatory challenge. In this setting, IVIG rapidly (< 10 minutes) reduced adherent leukocyte numbers and dramatically inhibited interactions between RBCs and WBCs, resulting in improved microcirculatory blood flow and survival of sickle cell “Berkeley” mice. Longer survival correlated positively with blood flow (P = .001) and negatively with the number of adherent leukocytes (P = .001) and RBC-WBC interactions (P = .002). Using multichannel digital fluorescence videomicroscopy, we found that IVIG affected specifically the recruitment of neutrophils. Moreover, further analyses of leukocyte behavior revealed that IVIG significantly increased rolling velocities, indicating that it alters adhesion pathways involved in slow rolling. These data suggest that the potential therapeutic benefits of IVIG in SCD crises should be evaluated in a clinical trial.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily S. Payne ◽  
Samantha Krost-Reuhl ◽  
Axel Heimann ◽  
Oliver Kempski ◽  
Naureen Keric ◽  
...  

Abstract Clot-retrieval failure and embolism in new territories (ENT) are complications reducing the efficacy of mechanical thrombectomy (MT). Reasons for these problems are clot abruption during stent retriever retraction into the cylindrical tip of a standard distal access catheter (DAC), and antegrade blood flow during retrieval. To overcome these complications, a funnel-shaped tip catheter model was developed and tested. Using an experimental in vitro setup, this study compared the efficacy of a funnel-shaped tip with a standard cylindrical tip in combination with different clot compositions. Mechanical thrombectomy was performed 80 times for each tip, using two stent retrievers (Trevo XP ProVue 3/20 mm and 4/20 mm) and four different clot types (mechanical vs. static preparation, 0-24h vs. 72h clot aging times). Significantly higher first-pass recanalization rates were observed for the funnel-shaped tip, which reached 70.0% vs. 30.0% for the standard tip (absolute difference, 32; relative difference 20.0%, P < 0.05), regardless of the clot type and stent retriever. Recanalization could be increased using fibrin-rich mechanical clots vs. clots prepared under static conditions, as well as 0-24h vs. 72h aged clots, respectively. The extended in vitro-experiments verified the usability of the recently patented funnel-shaped DAC, hereby implementing next-level in vivo-experiments.


Author(s):  
U Lichtenauer ◽  
PL Schmid ◽  
A Oßwald ◽  
I Renner-Müller ◽  
M Reincke ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (04) ◽  
pp. 1242-1248 ◽  
Author(s):  
David E Newby ◽  
Robert A Wright ◽  
Christopher A Ludlam ◽  
Keith A A Fox ◽  
Nicholas A Boon ◽  
...  

SummaryThe effects on blood flow and plasma fibrinolytic and coagulation parameters of intraarterial substance P, an endothelium dependent vasodilator, and sodium nitroprusside, a control endothelium independent vasodilator, were studied in the human forearm circulation. At subsystemic locally active doses, both substance P (2-8 pmol/min) and sodium nitroprusside (2-8 μg/min) caused dose-dependent vasodilatation (p <0.001 for both) without affecting plasma concentrations of PAI-1, von Willebrand factor antigen or factor VIII:C activity. Substance P caused local increases in t-PA antigen and activity (p <0.001) in the infused arm while sodium nitroprusside did not. At higher doses, substance P increased blood flow and t-PA concentrations in the noninfused arm. We conclude that brief, locally active and subsystemic infusions of intraarterial substance P cause a rapid and substantial local release of t-PA which appear to act via a flow and nitric oxide independent mechanism. This model should provide a useful and selective method of assessing the in vivo capacity of the forearm endothelium to release t-PA acutely.


2006 ◽  
Vol 66 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
N Ochsenbein-Kölble ◽  
J Jani ◽  
G Verbist ◽  
L Lewi ◽  
K Marquardt ◽  
...  

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