Vertebral Artery Origin Stent Placement Using the Dual Lumen Qureshi-Jiao Guidecatheter
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10376188

How to Cite

Adnan I. Qureshi, Yabing Wang, Mohammad Rauf Afzal, & Liqun Jiao. (2023). Vertebral Artery Origin Stent Placement Using the Dual Lumen Qureshi-Jiao Guidecatheter. Journal of Vascular and Interventional Neurology, 9(6). Retrieved from https://ojs.jvin.org/index.php/jvin/article/view/160

Abstract

Objective—We report the first experience with a new dual lumen guide catheter with lumen A with
curved tip designed for delivery of stent and angioplasty catheters and lumen B with side exit for coaxial
placement of stiff 0.014 inch wire.
Methods—We prospectively determined technical success, intended procedure (stent delivery at target
lesion and a final residual stenosis <30%) completed without a need for a different catheter, and technical
ease, intended procedure completed without ≥3 unsuccessful attempts in patients with symptomatic vertebral artery origin stenosis. Vertebral artery origin was classified as type A if originated from ascending segment and type B if originated from an arch or horizontal segment of subclavian artery.
Results—The mean age of the four treated patients was 66.2 years (range 64–68 years). The mean percentage of vertebral artery origin stenosis was 82.7% (range 60–92%). The origin of vertebral artery from
subclavian artery was classified as type A and type B origins in two patients each. The dual lumen catheter
was advanced over an exchange length of 0.035 inch glide wire in one patient and directly through transfemoral insertion in three patients. Technical success and technical ease was achieved in all four procedures.
Post procedure residual stenosis was 6% (range 5–7%). The primary operator rated the performance of
guide catheter as superior compared with another catheter used in such procedures.
Conclusion—The present study demonstrates the feasibility of performing stent placement for vertebral
artery origin stenosis by using a dual lumen catheter with superior performance.

PDF
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10376188
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Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Vascular and Interventional Neurology

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