4.4 Article

Catheter tip distensibility substantially influences the aspiration force of thrombectomy devices

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROINTERVENTIONAL SURGERY
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 63-67

出版社

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2021-017487

关键词

catheter; intervention; stroke; technique; thrombectomy

资金

  1. European Commission-ERANET [nAngioderm JTC2018-103]
  2. Spanish Ministry MICINN [MAT2015-62725-ERC, RTI2018-096320-B-C21, RTI2018-097038-B-C22]
  3. Severo Ochoa Program for Centers of Excellence and RD 2016-2019
  4. Obra Social la Caixa [CI0015]
  5. CERCA Program
  6. Commission for Universities and Research of the Department of Innovation, Universities, and Enterprise of the Generalitat de Catalunya [SGR2017-359]
  7. CIBER-BBN
  8. Spanish Network of Cell Therapy (TERCEL)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study characterized the aspiration performance of different catheters on stiff clots in an in vitro vascular model, finding that ADAPT performance is highly influenced by catheter tip shape-adaptability to the clot and that the effective inner diameter (eff-ID) may differ from the labeled-ID specified by manufacturers. Based on experimental findings, considering the eff-ID rather than the labeled-ID is crucial for estimating device efficiency accurately.
Background A direct aspiration first pass thrombectomy (ADAPT) is a fast-growing technique for which a broad catalog of catheters that provide a wide range of aspiration forces can be used. We aimed to characterize different catheters' aspiration performance on stiff clots in an in vitro vascular model. We hypothesized that labeled catheter inner diameter (labeled-ID) is not the only parameter that affects the aspiration force (asp-F) and that thrombus-catheter tip interaction and distensibility also play a major role. Methods We designed an experimental setup consisting of a 3D-printed carotid artery immersed in a water deposit. We measured asp-F and distensibility of catheter tips when performing ADAPT on a stiff clot analog larger than catheter labeled-ID. Correlations between asp-F, catheter ID, and tip distensibility were statistically assessed. Results Experimental asp-F and catheter labeled-ID were correlated (r=0.9601; P<0.01). The relative difference between experimental and theoretical asp-F (obtained by the product of the tip's section area by the vacuum pressure) correlated with tip's distensibility (r=0.9050; P<0.01), evidencing that ADAPT performance is highly influenced by catheter tip shape-adaptability to the clot and that the effective ID (eff-ID) may differ from the labeled-ID specified by manufacturers. Eff-ID showed the highest correlation with experimental asp-F (r=0.9944; P<0.01), confirming that eff-ID rather than labeled-ID should be considered to better estimate the device efficiency. Conclusions Catheter tip distensibility can induce a significant impact on ADAPT performance when retrieving a stiff clot larger than the device ID. Our findings might contribute to optimizing thrombectomy strategies and the design of novel aspiration catheters.

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