4.7 Review

Risk Factors, Pathophysiologic Mechanisms, and Potential Treatment Strategies of Futile Recanalization after Endovascular Therapy in Acute Ischemic Stroke

Journal

AGING AND DISEASE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

INT SOC AGING & DISEASE
DOI: 10.14336/AD.2023.0321-1

Keywords

acute ischemic stroke; endovascular therapy; futile recanalization; mechanism

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Endovascular therapy is the first-line treatment for acute ischemic stroke, but a phenomenon called futile recanalization still leads to poor functional recovery in nearly half of the treated patients. The complex pathophysiology of futile recanalization includes tissue no-reflow, early arterial reocclusion, poor collateral circulation, hemorrhagic transformation, impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation, and large hypoperfusion volume. Targeted therapy strategies have been researched, but further exploration is needed for translation to the bedside.
Endovascular therapy is the first-line treatment for acute ischemic stroke. However, studies have shown that, even with the timely opening of occluded blood vessels, nearly half of all patients treated with endovascular therapy for acute ischemic stroke still have poor functional recovery, a phenomenon called futile recanalization.. The pathophysiology of futile recanalization is complex and may include tissue no-reflow (microcirculation reperfusion failure despite recanalization of the occluded large artery), early arterial reocclusion (reocclusion of the recanalized artery 24-48 hours post endovascular therapy), poor collateral circulation, hemorrhagic transformation (cerebral bleeding following primary ischemic stroke), impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation, and large hypoperfusion volume. Therapeutic strategies targeting these mechanisms have been attempted in preclinical research; however, translation to the bedside remains to be explored. This review summarizes the risk factors, pathophysiological mechanisms, and targeted therapy strategies of futile recanalization, focusing on the mechanisms and targeted therapy strategies of no-reflow to deepen the understanding of this phenomenon and provide new translational research ideas and potential intervention targets for improving the efficacy of endovascular therapy for acute ischemic stroke.

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