Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Endovascular Treatment of Medium Vessel Occlusion Stroke

Sounds like someone is trying to justify failure in solving this problem to 100% recovery! I hate having to point out Business 101 to stroke medical 'professionals'.

Endovascular Treatment of Medium Vessel Occlusion Stroke

Originally publishedhttps://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.036942Stroke. 2024;55:769–778

Approximately one-third of acute ischemic strokes with an identifiable vessel occlusion are caused by medium vessel occlusion (MeVO), that is, nonlarge vessel occlusions that are potentially amenable to endovascular treatment (EVT). Management of patients with MeVO is challenging in many ways: detecting MeVOs can be challenging, particularly for inexperienced physicians(With proper EXACT PROTOCOLS to follow inexperienced physicians shouldn't have problems. The experienced physicians should have been competent enough to write EXACT PROTOCOLS for this! Proper leadership would know this and get the FUCKING PROBLEM SOLVED!), and in busy clinical routine, MeVOs, therefore, remain sometimes undiagnosed. While the clinical course of MeVO stroke with medical management, including intravenous thrombolysis, is by no means, benign, it is more favorable compared with large vessel occlusion. At the same time, EVT complication rates are higher, and thus, the marginal benefit of EVT beyond best medical management is expected to be smaller and more challenging to detect if it were present. Several randomized controlled trials are currently underway to investigate whether and to what degree patients with MeVO may benefit from EVT and will soon provide robust data for evidence-based MeVO EVT decision-making. In this review, we discuss different ways of defining MeVOs, strategies to optimize MeVO detection on imaging, and considerations for EVT decision-making in the setting of MeVO stroke. We discuss the technical challenges related to MeVO EVT and conclude with an overview of currently ongoing MeVO EVT trials.

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