Health & Medical Heart Diseases

Tiny Vacuum Sucks Clots from Heart

Tiny Vacuum Sucks Clots from Heart Feb. 6, 2008 -- A tiny vacuum threaded through an artery sucks blood clots away from the heart, improving outcomes for heart attack patients.

Blood clots in the heart arteries cause heart attacks, angina, and other problems. The current treatment -- balloon angioplasty with wire-mesh stents to prop open the artery -- has enormously increased the chances of surviving a heart attack.


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Now, the odds of surviving a heart attack may be even better. Instead of using a balloon to squash the clot against the sides of the artery, a new technique allows doctors to vacuum away the clot.

A clinical trial compared the technique -- using the commercially available 6-French Export Aspiration Catheter from Medtronic -- to balloon angioplasty. Felix Zijlstra, MD, PhD, director of the thorax center at the University of Groningen, Netherlands, and colleagues randomly assigned 1,071 heart attack patients to one treatment or the other.

"We are on the brink of a new development," Zijlstra tells WebMD. "Instead of fragmenting clot material with a balloon -- and potentially [sending it downstream to damage the heart], it makes sense to get rid of the debris to start with."

As in balloon angioplasty, the new technique calls for doctors to run a guide wire into the artery and through the middle of the blood clot. But instead of running a balloon catheter along the guide wire, doctors use an "aspiration catheter" -- a thin vacuum -- to suck away the clot. A balloon is then used to push open the artery, and a stent is placed to support the opened artery.

The idea is to keep pieces of the clot -- embolisms -- from breaking loose and blocking smaller arteries, which can kill the sections of the heart fed by these arteries.

In the Zijlstra study, such blockages were seen in 17% of the patients treated with the new technique and in 26% of those treated with traditional balloon angioplasty. The less downstream blockage patients had, the better their outcomes.

Thrombus Aspiration: Treatment Wave of the Future


The technique isn't perfect. Even the highly experienced study researchers failed to remove the clot in 27% of cases. Still, electrocardiogram results returned to near-normal for 56.6% of patients treated with the technique, compared with 44.2% of patients treated with balloon angioplasty.

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