JNIS podcast   /     Impacts of prolonged intracranial catheter dwell time

Summary

Observations from practice and data analysis have shown that the duration of mechanical thrombectomy procedures are a strong predictor of outcome even with successful procedures. A large multicenter study was conducted which gives insight into choices between catheter types, and strategic decisions to be made during prolonged procedures. Dr Felipe C. Albuquerque, Editor-in-Chief of JNIS, interviews Dr. Ali Alawieh¹ and Dr. Alejandro Spiotta²,  two authors of the paper:  Prolonged intracranial catheter dwell time exacerbates penumbral stress and worsens stroke thrombectomy outcomes   1. Department of Neurosurgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA 2. Med Univ S Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA   Please subscribe to the JNIS podcast on your favourite platform to get the latest podcast every month. If you enjoy our podcast, you can leave us a review or a comment on Apple Podcasts (https://apple.co/4aZmlpT) or Spotify (https://spoti.fi/3UKhGT5). We'd love to hear your feedback on social media - @JNIS_BMJ.

Subtitle
Duration
21:39
Publishing date
2025-02-14 15:01
Link
https://jnisbmj.podbean.com/e/impacts-of-prolonged-intracranial-catheter-dwell-time/
Contributors
  BMJ Group
author  
Enclosures
https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/2vgzmjhkqjxg5hjh/jnis_120225_prolonged_intracranial_catheter_dwell_time.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Observations from practice and data analysis have shown that the duration of mechanical thrombectomy procedures are a strong predictor of outcome even with successful procedures. A large multicenter study was conducted which gives insight into choices between catheter types, and strategic decisions to be made during prolonged procedures.

Dr Felipe C. Albuquerque, Editor-in-Chief of JNIS, interviews Dr. Ali Alawieh¹ and Dr. Alejandro Spiotta²,  two authors of the paper: 

Prolonged intracranial catheter dwell time exacerbates penumbral stress and worsens stroke thrombectomy outcomes

 

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

2. Med Univ S Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA

 

Please subscribe to the JNIS podcast on your favourite platform to get the latest podcast every month. If you enjoy our podcast, you can leave us a review or a comment on Apple Podcasts (https://apple.co/4aZmlpT) or Spotify (https://spoti.fi/3UKhGT5). We'd love to hear your feedback on social media - @JNIS_BMJ.