A stiff balloon is tracked over the guide wire and across the right vertebral artery ostium. It is partially inflated (not shown here) and its body is used to help track the catheter over both the balloon and the guide wire into the right vertebral artery.
When significant ostial stenosis prohibits the ability to pass a system of catheters through a vessel origin, it can be useful to use a balloon angioplasty to dilitate the ostium and allow passage into that vessel. In this case, a 3 mm by 20 mm balloon was used to create enough space for a large thrombus aspiration catheter to be advanced into the right vertebral artery.
Stentriever-assisted manual aspiration thrombectomy of the basilar apex clot was performed and this first, post-thrombectomy injection demonstrates complete filling of the basilar artery and the bilateral posterior cerebral arteries, superior cerebellar arteries, and posterior inferior cerebellar arteries.
A balloon-mounted stent is deployed across the stenosed origin of the right vertebral artery. Accurate placement of the stent is critical because it is possible that during stent deployment the stent can advance too distal or retract too proximal, missing the area of stenosis altogether. Note how in this case, the balloon inflates on either book-end of the point of maximal stenosis, and then inflates at the mid point as well. Once adequate angioplasty has been performed, the balloon is deflated revealing the stent in excellent position.
Right subclavian artery fluoroscopy, AP view, demonstrates the vertebral artery ostium stent in excellent position. There is good, brisk flow through the stent and no significant residual stenosis.
Right subclavian artery injection, AP view, demonstrates brisk anterograde flow through the right vertebral artery and a widely patent basilar artery.