Anatomical Directions
Oxygen Deprivation
Measurements
Head Space
Complications
100

Opposite to distal (ie, further away from origin)

What is proximal (ie, closer to origin)?

100

An area of tissue that has undergone ischemic necrosis

What is an infarct or infarction?

100

An 8F catheter is larger than a 6F catheter because in this measurement system, larger numbers indicate a larger outer diameter.

What is the French scale?

100

This term refers to anything located within the cranial cavity.

What is intracranial?

100

A localized collection of blood outside a vessel that remains confined to a tissue space.

What is a hematoma?

200

Towards the head

What is superior?

200

Decreased tissue blood supply leading to reduced levels of O₂, glucose, nutrients, and impaired removal of metabolic waste.

What is ischemia?

200

For this type of device, the French measurement usually describes the ID and not the OD

What is a sheath?

200

This head space contains cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and lies between the arachnoid and pia mater.

What is the subarachnoid space?
200

A tear in the arterial intima creates a false lumen within the vessel wall.

What is a dissection?

300

These represent the three sectional planes which are orthogonal to each other

What are coronal, sagittal, and axial planes?
300

This region of brain tissue has lost normal electrical function but remains structurally viable and can potentially be salvaged with timely reperfusion therapy.

What is the ischemic penumbra?

300

This French size converts to 2mm

6 French

300

This term refers specifically to pathology occurring within the brain tissue itself, including white and gray matter

What is intraparenchymal?

300

This vascular lesion is sometimes called a "false aneurysm" because its wall is not composed of normal arterial layers.

What is a pseudoaneurysm

400

Imagining a line in the sagittal plane splitting the left and right halves of the body evenly, this direction represents moving away from that line

What is lateral?

400

Low tissue oxygenation (regardless of the blood levels of oxygen)

What is hypoxia?

400

These device types (2 of them) represents it's diameters in both French (for outer diameter) and inches (for inner diameter)

What are catheters and microcatheters

400

A subdural hematoma forms in the potential space between these two meningeal layers.

What are the dura mater and arachnoid mater?

400

During angiography, contrast seen escaping outside the vessel lumen indicates this complication.

What is extravasation?

500

These represent the alternative names of coronal, sagittal and axial planes

What are frontal, longitudinal, or transverse planes?

500

During this stage of the ischemic cascade, excessive glutamate release causes NMDA receptor activation, calcium influx, and activation of proteases, lipases, and endonucleases.

What is excitotoxicity?

500

This measurement for needles goes up when the diameter goes down.

What is Guage?

500

This hemorrhage typically appears in the basal ganglia in patients with chronic hypertension.

hat is an intracerebral (intraparenchymal) hemorrhage?

500

This physiologic response results from excess fluid accumulation within tissues and can contribute to increased pressure.

What is edema?

M
e
n
u