Radiology Case Reports (Apr 2021)

Iatrogenic intracranial vessel dissection during mechanical thrombectomy rescued by emergent stenting: 2 case reports

  • Masahiro Nakahara, MD,
  • Taichiro Imahori, MD, PhD,
  • Kazuhiro Tanaka, MD, PhD,
  • Yusuke Okamura, MD, PhD,
  • Atsushi Arai, MD,
  • Shunsuke Yamashita, MD,
  • Hirofumi Iwahashi, MD,
  • Tatsuya Mori, MD,
  • Takashi Sasayama, MD, PhD,
  • Eiji Kohmura, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
pp. 835 – 842

Abstract

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Intracranial vessel dissection is a procedural complication associated with endovascular treatment. However, there have been few reports on its potential causes and management during mechanical thrombectomy. In approximately 250 cases of mechanical thrombectomy over the past 5 years at our institution, iatrogenic intracranial dissection occurred in 2 patients (0.8%). In this report, we described these 2 cases that were rescued through emergent stenting. Mechanical thrombectomy, using both a stent retriever and an aspiration catheter, was performed for acute middle cerebral artery M2 occlusion in Patient 1 (a 69-year-old man) and for distal M1 occlusion in Patient 2 (an 83-year-old woman). In both cases, recanalization was achieved with the procedure, but irregular stenosis developed at the initially nonoccluded, but mildly arteriosclerotic, M1, after recanalization. During the thrombectomy procedure, the aspiration catheter sifted up to the arteriosclerotic M1. In both cases, the lesions were considered vessel dissection, due to a shift of the aspiration catheter tip into the arteriosclerotic vessel wall. Repeated percutaneous angiography with antithrombotic therapy failed to improve the lesions and to maintain the antegrade blood flow. Finally, lesions in each patient were successfully rescued through the use of emergent stenting. A drug-eluting stent for coronary use was deployed in Patient 1, and an Enterprise stent was applied in Patient 2. Inadvertent shift of the aspiration catheter into arteriosclerotic vessels can cause a serious intracranial vessel dissection. When performing mechanical thrombectomy, intracranial stents need to be available as rescue treatment devices to manage refractory iatrogenic intracranial vessel dissection.

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