» Articles » PMID: 28059705

Emergent Endovascular Management of Long-Segment and Flow-Limiting Carotid Artery Dissections in Acute Ischemic Stroke Intervention with Multiple Tandem Stents

Overview
Specialty Neurology
Date 2017 Jan 7
PMID 28059705
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background And Purpose: Although most cervical dissections are managed medically, emergent endovascular treatment may become necessary in the presence of intracranial large-vessel occlusions, flow-limiting and long-segment dissections with impending occlusion, and/or hypoperfusion-related ischemia at risk of infarction. We investigated the role of emergent endovascular stenting of long-segment carotid dissections in the acute ischemic stroke setting.

Materials And Methods: We retrospectively studied long-segment carotid dissections requiring stent reconstruction with multiple tandem stents (≥3 stents) and presenting with acute (<12 hours) ischemic stroke symptoms (NIHSS score, ≥4). We analyzed patient demographics, vascular risk factors, clinical presentations, imaging/angiographic findings, technical procedures/complications, and clinical outcomes.

Results: Fifteen patients (mean age, 51.5 years) with acute ischemic stroke (mean NIHSS score, 15) underwent endovascular stent reconstruction for vessel and/or ischemic tissue salvage. All carotid dissections presented with >70% flow limiting stenosis and involved the distal cervical ICA with a minimum length of 3.5 cm. Carotid stent reconstruction was successful in all patients with no residual stenosis or flow limitation. Nine patients (60%) harbored intracranial occlusions, and 6 patients (40%) required intra-arterial thrombolysis/thrombectomy, achieving 100% TICI 2b-3 reperfusion. Two procedural complications were limited to thromboembolic infarcts from in-stent thrombus and asymptomatic hemorrhagic infarct transformation (7% morbidity, 0% mortality). Angiographic and ultrasound follow-up confirmed normal carotid caliber and stent patency, with 2 cases of <20% in-stent stenosis. Early clinical improvement resulted in a mean discharge NIHSS score of 6, and 9/15 (60%) patients achieved a 90-day mRS of ≤2.

Conclusions: Emergent stent reconstruction of long-segment and flow-limiting carotid dissections in acute ischemic stroke intervention is safe and effective, with favorable clinical outcomes, allowing successful thrombectomy, vessel salvage, restoration of cerebral perfusion, and/or prevention of recurrent thromboembolic stroke.

Citing Articles

What You Always Wanted to Know about Endovascular Therapy in Acute Ischemic Stroke but Never Dared to Ask: A Comprehensive Review.

Bucke P, Cohen J, Horvath T, Cimpoca A, Bhogal P, Bazner H Rev Cardiovasc Med. 2024; 23(10):340.

PMID: 39077121 PMC: 11267361. DOI: 10.31083/j.rcm2310340.


Endovascular reconstruction of high cervical and long-segment carotid artery dissections with Leo plus stent.

Lu G, Yang W, Jia Z, Liu S Neuroradiology. 2024; 66(3):409-416.

PMID: 38191867 DOI: 10.1007/s00234-023-03274-y.


A Rare Case of Isolated Spontaneous Common Carotid Artery Dissection Treated by Telescoping Stents.

Lee Y Cureus. 2023; 15(10):e46933.

PMID: 38022025 PMC: 10640914. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.46933.


Primary stent implantation for bilateral spontaneous cervical ICA dissections with hypoperfusion after 72 h from onset: a case report.

Chen Y, Zhang N, Chen Y, Zheng X, Jin X, Zhang J CVIR Endovasc. 2022; 5(1):40.

PMID: 35962854 PMC: 9375808. DOI: 10.1186/s42155-022-00318-x.


Endovascular treatment of patients with acute ischemic stroke and tandem occlusion due to internal carotid artery dissection: A multicenter experience.

Da Ros V, Pusceddu F, Lattanzi S, Scaggiante J, Sallustio F, Marrama F Neuroradiol J. 2022; 36(1):86-93.

PMID: 35699167 PMC: 9893158. DOI: 10.1177/19714009221108673.


References
1.
Papanagiotou P, Roth C, Walter S, Behnke S, Grunwald I, Viera J . Carotid artery stenting in acute stroke. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2011; 58(23):2363-9. DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2011.08.044. View

2.
Cohen J, Gomori J, Rajz G, Itshayek E, Eichel R, Leker R . Extracranial carotid artery stenting followed by intracranial stent-based thrombectomy for acute tandem occlusive disease. J Neurointerv Surg. 2014; 7(6):412-7. DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2014-011175. View

3.
Lucas C, Moulin T, Deplanque D, Tatu L, Chavot D . Stroke patterns of internal carotid artery dissection in 40 patients. Stroke. 1998; 29(12):2646-8. DOI: 10.1161/01.str.29.12.2646. View

4.
Xu P, Lv L, Li S, Ge H, Rong Y, Hu C . Use of high-resolution 3.0-T magnetic resonance imaging to characterize atherosclerotic plaques in patients with cerebral infarction. Exp Ther Med. 2015; 10(6):2424-2428. PMC: 4665673. DOI: 10.3892/etm.2015.2815. View

5.
Matsubara N, Miyachi S, Tsukamoto N, Kojima T, Izumi T, Haraguchi K . Endovascular intervention for acute cervical carotid artery occlusion. Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2013; 155(6):1115-23. DOI: 10.1007/s00701-013-1697-x. View