Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Intravascular Lithotripsy for Treatment of Calcified Lesions During Carotid Artery Stenting

In my opinion, which is not medically trained, this sounds extremely dangerous. Disrupt calcified plaque sounds likely to send debris into the brain.  So ask your doctor to guarantee no damage or strokes from doing this.  I still think you determine if the Circle of Willis is complete, then just close up the offending artery. I had only 3 arteries supplying my brain for 10+ years and had zero effects from that.

Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) is a technology derived from renal lithotripsy, in which multiple emitters mounted on a traditional balloon catheter provide circumferential pulsatile energy to disrupt calcified plaque and improve acute gain while minimizing vessel injury.

Intravascular Lithotripsy for Treatment of Calcified Lesions During Carotid Artery Stenting

First Published September 1, 2020 Research Article 

To report the use of intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) in the treatment of calcified carotid artery lesions.

The records of 21 high-surgical-risk patients (mean age 75.1±8.1 years; 17 men) who were treated at 8 centers for carotid artery stenosis ≥70% were retrospectively reviewed. Twelve patients had a history of cerebrovascular disease. All patients had heavily calcified carotid artery lesions: 19 de novo and 2 in-stent restenoses (ISR). The mean baseline stenosis was 82.3%±9.7%. IVL was utilized at the discretion of the operator, followed by balloon angioplasty. Embolic protection devices were used in all cases.

In 19 patients, IVL was followed by stent implantation; the 2 ISR lesions were dilated only. The mean IVL balloon diameter was 4.64±1.13 mm, and the mean number of IVL pulses applied was 67.2±61.4 (range 10–180). All procedures were technically successful (<30% residual stenosis). No patients developed symptomatic bradycardia or hypotension due to IVL, and there were no adverse events associated with IVL delivery. All patients were discharged on dual antiplatelet therapy. Seventeen days after the procedure, 1 patient experienced an ischemic stroke that was deemed due to aortic arch manipulation during transfemoral access. Carotid duplex ultrasound examination identified significant restenosis (>70%) in 1 asymptomatic patient at 12 months after the index procedure. No patients required reintervention during a median follow-up of 6 months (range 1–12).

This preliminary experience demonstrates that IVL can be a safe and effective approach for the management of severely calcified carotid lesions. Further research is warranted to determine the longer-term safety and efficacy of IVL for dilation of calcified carotid artery lesions as an adjunct to carotid artery stenting.

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