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Etiologic and prognostic value of external carotid artery thrombus detection during endovascular therapy for anterior circulation proximal occlusions

Authors :
Thomas Courret
Thomas Tourdias
Jean Papaxanthos
Julien Labreuche
Florent Gariel
Jean‐Sebastien Liegey
Stephane Olindo
Pauline Renou
Jerome Berge
Xavier Barreau
Sharmila Sagnier
Patrice Menegon
Ludovic Lucas
Pierre Briau
Mathilde Poli
Sabrina Debruxelles
François Rouanet
Vincent Dousset
Igor Sibon
Gaultier Marnat
Source :
European Journal of Neurology. 30:380-388
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

An early understanding of stroke mechanism may improve treatment and outcome in patients presenting with large vessel occlusion stroke (LVOS) treated with mechanical thrombectomy (MT). We aimed to investigate whether spontaneous external carotid artery (ECA) embolism detection during MT is associated with stroke etiology and clinical outcome.We retrospectively reviewed our prospectively maintained institutional database including consecutive patients with anterior circulation LVOS treated with MT between January 2015 and August 2020.An ECA embolus was detected in 68 of 1298 patients (5.2%). The kappa coefficient for interobserver agreement was 0.89 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.82-0.95). ECA embolism was significantly associated with intracranial internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusion (p 0.001), cardioembolic etiology (p 0.001) and a lower clot burden score (p 0.001). Day-1 variation of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score (adjusted odds ratio [OR] -2.7, 95% CI -4.9 to 0.3; p = 0.021) and delta Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomography Score (adjusted OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.2 to 1.5; p = 0.004) were worse among patients with ECA emboli. There was no significant difference in 90-day functional outcome between groups (adjusted OR 0.8, 95% CI 0.42 to 1.52; p = 0.50).In patients with anterior circulation LVOS treated with MT, ECA embolism was significantly associated with cardioembolic etiology, high thrombus burden and proximal intracranial ICA occlusions. This underexplored angiographic pattern might provide a valuable etiologic clue to the underlying cause of anterior circulation LVOS and may also help determine the appropriate revascularization strategy.

Subjects

Subjects :
Neurology
Neurology (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
14681331 and 13515101
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85e8c13d6df158dba4692a1a9bc984af