Evaluation of pure subarachnoid hemorrhage after mechanical thrombectomy in a series of 781 consecutive patients

Author:

Benalia Victor HC12ORCID,Aghaebrahim Amin1,Cortez Gustavo M1ORCID,Sauvageau Eric1,Hanel Ricardo A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lyerly Neurosurgery, Baptist Neurological Institute, Jacksonville, FL, USA

2. Research Department, Jacksonville University, Jacksonville, FL, USA

Abstract

Introduction Subarachnoid hyperdensity is commonly seen on postoperative computed tomography scans within 24 h after mechanical thrombectomy. The impact on patients’ outcomes remains uncertain. We present a real-world experience evaluating periprocedural factors associated with the development of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and its impact on outcomes of patients with acute stroke undergoing mechanical thrombectomy. Methods A single-center, retrospective analysis was performed between January 2016 and August 2021, including all consecutive patients who underwent thrombectomy. Our study aimed to evaluate periprocedural factors associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage within 24 h of the intervention, and the potential impact on patients' outcome. Results Of 781 patients, 44 patients (5.63%) demonstrated pure SAH within 24 h of the intervention. Patients from the SAH group were more likely to have tandem occlusion (15.9% vs. 5.2%, p = .003), aspiration using reperfusion pump system (81.4% vs. 66.8%, p = .047), intraoperative complications (9.1% vs. 0.9%; p < .001), longer puncture-to-recanalization times (45 min vs 29 min, p = .042) and a higher median number of passes to achieve recanalization (1 vs. 3, p = .002). There was no statistically significant difference in the long-term functional outcome between the groups. Conclusion We suggest that dual-energy computed tomography could better distinguish between blood and pure contrast stagnation. Still, SAH was not associated with an unfavorable outcome in stroke patients undergoing thrombectomy.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Immunology

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