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    Date Issued2021 (1)2020 (2)AuthorGounis, Matthew J. (3)
    Kraitem, Afif (3)
    Anagnostakou, Vania (2)King, Robert M. (2)Puri, Ajit S. (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Radiology (3)New England Center for Stroke Research (3)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordRadiology (3)Cardiovascular Diseases (2)Acute ischemic stroke (1)Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment (1)aneurysm (1)View MoreJournalJournal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (1)Journal of neurointerventional surgery (1)Radiology (1)

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    Preventing Inadvertent Foreign Body Injection in Angiography

    Nikoubashman, Omid; Kraitem, Afif; Arslanian, Rose; Gounis, Matthew J.; Sichtermann, Thorsten; Wiesmann, Martin (2021-03-09)
    Background: Inadvertent injection of foreign material during angiography, particularly neuroangiography, should be avoided to reduce the risk of embolic complications. Woven gauze and cotton fabrics have been identified as sources of inadvertent foreign body embolization. Purpose: To find the source of particles that contaminate injections on an angiography table and to identify measures for their reduction. Materials and Methods: The number and size of particles on an angiographic supply table at a tertiary stroke center were analyzed by using the Coulter principle in September 2019. Seven conditions (saline directly drawn from its bag, from a small metal cup, from a small plastic cup, from a large plastic bowl, from a large plastic bowl with a guidewire and its sheath, from a large plastic bowl with a stack of woven gauze, and from a large plastic bowl with a large cotton towel) were tested at different time intervals (0, 30, and 60 minutes). Each container was filled with saline, and particle count was analyzed immediately after unpackaging, after rinsing with saline, and after introduction of foreign material; t tests were used for statistical comparisons. Results: Freshly unpacked basins can be contaminated with many submillimetric particles (range, 4.4-25.1 particles per milliliter on average, depending on basin). Cotton towels and woven gauze placed in rinsed basins resulted in a significant increase in particles (from 1.5 particles per milliliter +/- 0.4 [standard deviation] to 64.4 particles per milliliter +/- 4.1 and 257.1 particles per milliliter +/- 11.6, respectively; P < .001). Rinsing basins with saline significantly reduced the number of particles (P < /= .03). Drawing saline directly from bags through intravenous lines yielded the lowest number of particles (0.1 particles per milliliter). Conclusion: To decrease the risk for foreign body embolization, it is best to rinse all basins before use, draw saline and contrast agents directly from the respective bags and bottles through intravenous lines, and avoid cotton towels and woven gauze in basins and on the angiography table altogether whenever possible.
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    High-resolution image-guided WEB aneurysm embolization by high-frequency optical coherence tomography

    Vardar, Zeynep; King, Robert M.; Kraitem, Afif; Langan, Erin T.; Peterson, Lindsy M.; Duncan, Benjamin H.; Raskett, Christopher M.; Anagnostakou, Vania; Gounis, Matthew J.; Puri, Ajit S.; et al. (2020-09-28)
    BACKGROUND: High-frequency optical coherence tomography (HF-OCT) is an intra-vascular imaging technique capable of assessing device-vessel interactions at spatial resolution approaching 10 microm. We tested the hypothesis that adequately deployed Woven EndoBridge (WEB) devices as visualized by HF-OCT lead to higher aneurysm occlusion rates. METHODS: In a leporine model, elastase-induced aneurysms (n=24) were treated with the WEB device. HF-OCT and digital subtraction angiography (DSA) were performed following WEB deployment and repeated at 4, 8, and 12 weeks. Protrusion (0-present, 1-absent) and malapposition (0-malapposed, 1-neck apposition > 50%) were binary coded. A device was considered 'adequately deployed' by HF-OCT and DSA if apposed and non-protruding. Aneurysm healing on DSA was reported using the 4-point WEB occlusion score: A or B grades were considered positive outcome. Neointimal coverage was quantified on HF-OCT images at 12 weeks and compared with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). RESULTS: Adequate deployment on HF-OCT correlated with positive outcome (P=0.007), but no statistically significant relationship was found between good outcome and adequate deployment on DSA (P=0.289). Absence of protrusion on HF-OCT correlated with a positive outcome (P=0.006); however, malapposition alone had no significant relationship (P=0.19). HF-OCT showed a strong correlation with SEM for the assessment of areas of neointimal tissue (R(2)=0.96; P < 0.001). More neointimal coverage of 78%+/-32% was found on 'adequate deployment' cases versus 31%+/-24% for the 'inadequate deployment' cases (P=0.001). CONCLUSION: HF-OCT visualizes features that can determine adequate device deployment to prognosticate early aneurysm occlusion following WEB implantation and can be used to longitudinally monitor aneurysm healing progression.
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    Biomechanics and hemodynamics of stent-retrievers

    Kuhn, Anna L.; Vardar, Zeynep; Kraitem, Afif; King, Robert M.; Anagnostakou, Vania; Puri, Ajit S.; Gounis, Matthew J. (2020-05-19)
    In 2015, multiple randomized clinical trials showed an unparalleled treatment benefit of stent-retriever thrombectomy as compared to standard medical therapy for the treatment of a large artery occlusion causing acute ischemic stroke. A short time later, the HERMES collaborators presented the patient-level pooled analysis of five randomized clinical trials, establishing class 1, level of evidence A for stent-retriever thrombectomy, in combination with intravenous thrombolysis when indicated to treat ischemic stroke. In the years following, evidence continues to mount for expanded use of this therapy for a broader category of patients. The enabling technology that changed the tide to support endovascular treatment of acute ischemic stroke is the stent-retriever. This review summarizes the history of intra-arterial treatment of stroke, introduces the biomechanics of embolus extraction with stent-retrievers, describes technical aspects of the intervention, provides a description of hemodynamic implications of stent-retriever embolectomy, and proposes future directions for a more comprehensive, multi-modal endovascular approach for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke.
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