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Vertebral PTA: Indications and Technique Patrick L. Whitlow, MD Director, Interventional Cardiology The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Patrick L. Whitlow, MD Director, Interventional Cardiology The Cleveland Clinic Foundation I have NO relationships related to this presentation. Off label use of products will be discussed in this presentation.
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Vertebral Artery Stenosis/ Occlusion: Symptoms 50% present with stroke as 1st symptom Embolic: sudden maximum onset, blurred vision, or homonymous hemianopsia- usually originate from VA origin Vertebrobasilar TIA’s - 22-35% stroke by 5yrs, and mortality with CVA 20-30%
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Vertebral Artery Stenosis/ Occlusion: Symptoms Hemodynamic: tandem/severe lesions Multiple Symptoms: vertigo,nausea, visual dysfunction; perioral paresthesia; ataxia; dysarthria; syncope; headache; nystagmus; facial palsy,numbness Thrombotic: prolonged, fluctuating course to maximum neurologic deficit or coma
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Vertebral Artery Stenosis/ Occlusion: Symptoms Symptoms:Hemodynamic Thrombotic Predominantly occur in Patients with Multi-Vessel Disease because of Redundant Blood Supply Emboli may occur with isolated disease
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Vertebral Artery Stenosis/ Occlusion: Treatment Symptomatic angiography > revascularization Asymptomatic majority get medical rx Consider revascularization if high risk for CVA (Remember 50% of these have no warning TIA’s) > 70% stenosis, esp. if worsening and dominant or single vertebral Posterior hypoperfusion or decreased reserve
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Vertebral Artery Stenosis/ Occlusion: Treatment Traditional: Avoid Hypotension;use Antiplatelet or Anticoagulant; carotid duplex; IC Doppler Vertebral Origin Lesions difficult to quantify w/o angiography, and need to assess collaterals >Consider surgery for V 1 disease(unusual) >Consider percutaneous intervention
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Background Limited data exists on percutaneous treatment of symptomatic vertebral artery disease Surgical treatment for symptomatic vertebral artery disease has significant morbidity and is limited to V1 segment
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4 3 2 1
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Vertebral Artery Disease: Surgery for V 1 Segment Carotid-Vertebral Transposition or Endarterectomy Mortality > 4% Morbidity 10-20%
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Vertebral Surgery Complications of V1 Surgery: Transient ischemic attack2.2% Thrombosis8.7% Koskas, Ann Vasc Surg 9:515-524 Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy2% Horner’s syndrome15% Lymphocele4% Chylothorax0.5% Thrombosis1% Beurger, Long Term Results in Vascular Surgery 1993:69-79
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Vertebral Artery Stenosis / Occlusion: Treatment No randomized studies Meds vs Surgery and No Trials Intervention vs either Meds or Surgery Symptoms are frequently vague: may need flow study to determine significance Neuro Consult very helpful
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Vertebral Artery Angiography Baseline Angiography: 30-45% LAO Arch Angio with 4 vessel study to define collateral support of the posterior circulation( non-selective) For Selective vertebral: JR4,Berenstein, MP A-P ; 20-30 o contralateral oblique;cranial 20º
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Vertebral Artery Stenting Pretreat with ASA, Clopidogrel > 3 days Access Femoral Artery, or Radial / Brachial JR4, IMA, MP, H 1, 6Fr Guide or /Ansel Sheath Heparin 50-70 units/kg: ACT 240-300 seconds Rarely consider IIb/IIIa blocker (IC Hemorrhage) Consider Embolic Protection: Tortuosity, landing zone, branches, retrieval
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Vertebral Artery Stenting Consider subclavian “Buddy-Wire” Roadmap; cross with 0.014” wire or EPD - stay out of Branches Consider predilation with coronary balloon vs direct stent Artery size 2.7 - 5.5mm, mean 4.5mm; lesion length typically 5-10mm - so use coronary stents
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Vertebral Artery Stenting If ostial, use balloon expandable stent for precise placement ~2mm into subclavian origin High restenosis rates in some series (up to 43%) - ?ostial coverage, ?recoil Consider DES; stents with radial force
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Vertebral Artery Stenting Precise Deployment, slow inflation to ~8atm Pull balloon back high pressure (12-14atm) to minimize risk distal dissection, Flare edge Nitro and angio to assess size, edges
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Optimize stent size with post-dilation Frequent Neuro status checks Final angios to asses for embolization, EPD damage,wire trauma,kinking Esp with EPD, push/pull guide into stent for retrieval Vertebral Artery Stenting
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Usual post Sheath care Usual ASA, Plavix Independent Neuro Exam Monitor overnight Usual Risk Factor Control
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Vertebral Artery Stenting Results 94-100% Technical Success Complications: Dissection, spasm, embolism, CVA, TIA, thrombosis, IC bleeding - All rare Usual 1-2% sheath related events
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Vertebral Artery Stenting Follow-Up Work with a Neurologist Non-invasive assessment not reliable Consider Re-Angio 4-6 months Restenosis 10-43% - usually asymptomatic Randomized Trials, long term follow-up are needed!! ?Role of EPD, DES, surgery
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Severe Ostial Vertebral Stenosis Post-procedure Pre-procedure
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