Abstract
Background Several animal studies have demonstrated that mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) may cause vessel wall injury (VWI). However, the histological changes in human cerebral arteries following MT are difficult to determine. Objective To investigate the occurrence of VWI during MT by histological and immunohistochemical evaluation of AIS clots. Methods As part of the multicenter STRIP registry, 277 clots from 237 patients were analyzed using Martius Scarlett Blue stain and immunohistochemistry for CD34 (endothelial cells) and smooth muscle actin (smooth muscle cells). Results MT devices used were aspiration catheters (100 cases), stentriever (101 cases), and both (36 cases). VWI was found in 33/277 clots (12%). There was no significant correlation between VWI and MT device. The degree of damage varied from grade I (mild intimal damage, 24 clots), to grade II (relevant intimal and subintimal damage, 3 clots), and III (severe injury, 6 clots). VWI clots contained significantly more erythrocytes (p=0.006*) and less platelets/ other (p=0.005*) than non-VWI clots suggesting soft thrombus material. Thrombolysis correlated with a lower rate of VWI (p=0.04*). VWI cases showed a significantly higher number of passes (2 [1–4] vs 1 [1–3], p=0.028*) and poorer recanalization outcome (p=0.01*) than cases without VWI. Conclusions Histological markers of VWI were present in 12% of AIS thrombi, suggesting that VWI might be related to MT. VWI was associated with soft thrombus consistency, higher number of passes and poorer revascularization outcome. There was no significant correlation between VWI and MT device.
| Original language | English (Ireland) |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 356-361 |
| Number of pages | 6 |
| Journal | Journal Of Neurointerventional Surgery |
| Volume | 14 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2022 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Oana Mereuta, Mehdi Abbasi, Seán Fitzgerald, Daying Dai, Ram Kadirvel, Ricardo Hanel, Albert Yoo, Mohammed Almekhlafi, Kennith Layton, Josser Delgado Almandoz, Peter Kvamme, Vitor Mendes Pereira, Babak Jahromi, Raul Nogueira, Matthew Gounis, Biraj Patel, Amin Aghaebrahim, Eric Sauvageau, Parita Bhuva, Jazba Soomro, Andrew Demchuk, Ike Thacker, Yasha Kayan, Alexander Copelan, Pouya Nazari, Donald Cantrell, Diogo Haussen, Alhamza Al-Bayati, Mahmoud Mohammaden, Leonardo Pisani, Gabriel Rodrigues, Ajit Puri, John Entwistle, Alexander Meves, Jorge Arturo Larco, Luis Savastano, Harry Cloft, David Kallmes, Karen Doyle, and Waleed Brinjikji