If you have to have these procedures ask your doctor how they will prevent ANY STROKE. Rare is not good enough. You can't let them off the hook because failure at tPA full recovery(88%) and full recovery failure(90%) means they are used to failure in their stroke processes. Survivors don't want failure, why is it ok for your doctors and stroke hospital to fail almost all the time and still be in business?
Procedural complexity tied to stroke after EVAR, TEVAR
In-hospital
stroke is rare after elective, but
it is more common after complex EVAR and thoracic endovascular aortic
repair, researchers reported at the Society for Vascular Surgery
Vascular Annual Meeting.
Nicholas J. Swerdlow, MD, vascular research fellow at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Marc Schermerhorn, MD,
chief of the division of vascular and endovascular surgery at Beth
Israel Deaconess, and colleagues performed a retrospective cohort study
of 41,540 patients who had infrarenal EVAR, 1,371 patients who had
complex EVAR (including fenestrated EVAR and chimney EVAR) and 4,600 patients who had TEVAR between 2011 and 2018 and were included in the Vascular Quality Initiative database.
According to the researchers, the in-hospital
stroke rate was 0.1% after infrarenal EVAR, 0.9% after complex EVAR and
2.9% after TEVAR. In the complex EVAR cohort, stroke rate was 0.7% after
fenestrated EVAR
with a custom-manufactured device, 0.4% after fenestrated EVAR with a
physician-modified endovascular graft and 2.1% after chimney EVAR.
Swerdlow and colleagues found that in the
infrarenal EVAR cohort, the procedural characteristics independently
associated with stroke were use of a proximal aortic extension (OR =
3.3; 95% CI, 1.4-7.9), aneurysm diameter > 65 mm (OR = 1.7; 95% CI,
1.1-2.7), and treatment of symptomatic aneurysms (OR = 2.1; 95% CI,
1.2-3.7).
In complex EVAR, arm access was associated
with elevated risk for stroke (OR = 7.6; 95% CI, 1.7-34) according to
the researchers, who noted that the chimney technique was not associated
with elevated stroke risk after adjustment for arm access.
In the TEVAR cohort, independent predictors of
stroke were multiple arm/neck access sites (OR = 2.5; 95% CI, 0.9-7),
left subclavian artery bypass (OR = 2.5; 95% CI, 1.5-4), left subclavian
artery stenting, whether uncovered or using the chimney technique (OR =
2.4; 95% CI, 0.8-7.4) and covered/occluded left subclavian artery (OR =
2.5; 95% CI, 1.5-4.1), according to the researchers.
Also in the TEVAR group, patients who had an
urgent procedure were more likely to have in-hospital stroke than
patients who had an elective one (OR = 2.1; 95% CI, 1.3-3.6), Swerdlow
and colleagues found.
“Increasing procedural complexity in EVAR and
TEVAR is associated with higher stroke rate, a risk that should be
factored into clinical decision-making,” Swerdlow and colleagues wrote
in an abstract. “The strong association between stroke and arm access
during complex EVAR warrants further study.” – by Erik Swain
Reference:
Swerdlow NJ, et al. Abstract RS08. Presented
at: Society for Vascular Surgery Vascular Annual Meeting; June 12-15,
2019; National Harbor, Md.
Disclosures: Swerdlow reports
no relevant financial disclosures. Schermerhorn reports he has financial
ties with Abbott Vascular, Cook Medical, Endologix, Medtronic and Silk
Road Medical.
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