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Selective intra-carotid blood cooling in acute ischemic stroke: A safety and feasibility study in an ovine stroke model
Author(s) -
Giorgio Cattaneo,
A Herrmann,
Sebastian Eiden,
Manuela Wieser,
Elias Kellner,
Soroush Doostkam,
Patrick Süß,
Selina Kiefer,
Lisa Fauth,
Christoph J. Maurer,
J. Wolfertz,
Björn Nitzsche,
Michael Büchert,
Tobias Jost,
Gabriele Ihorst,
Jörg Haberstroh,
Christoph K. W. Mülling,
Christoph Strecker,
WolfDirk Niesen,
Mukesch Shah,
Horst Urbach,
Johannes Boltze,
Stephan Meckel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.167
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1559-7016
pISSN - 0271-678X
DOI - 10.1177/0271678x211024952
Subject(s) - medicine , hypothermia , anesthesia , stroke (engine) , internal carotid artery , catheter , digital subtraction angiography , perfusion , angiography , surgery , engineering , mechanical engineering
Selective therapeutic hypothermia (TH) showed promising preclinical results as a neuroprotective strategy in acute ischemic stroke. We aimed to assess safety and feasibility of an intracarotid cooling catheter conceived for fast and selective brain cooling during endovascular thrombectomy in an ovine stroke model.Transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO, 3 h) was performed in 20 sheep. In the hypothermia group (n = 10), selective TH was initiated 20 minutes before recanalization, and was maintained for another 3 h. In the normothermia control group (n = 10), a standard 8 French catheter was used instead. Primary endpoints were intranasal cooling performance (feasibility) plus vessel patency assessed by digital subtraction angiography and carotid artery wall integrity (histopathology, both safety). Secondary endpoints were neurological outcome and infarct volumes.Computed tomography perfusion demonstrated MCA territory hypoperfusion during MCAO in both groups. Intranasal temperature decreased by 1.1 °C/3.1 °C after 10/60 minutes in the TH group and 0.3 °C/0.4 °C in the normothermia group (p < 0.001). Carotid artery and branching vessel patency as well as carotid wall integrity was indifferent between groups. Infarct volumes (p = 0.74) and neurological outcome (p = 0.82) were similar in both groups.Selective TH was feasible and safe. However, a larger number of subjects might be required to demonstrate efficacy.

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