Untreated infective endocarditis (IE) often produces infective emboli in major cerebral arteries. We describe a case of middle cerebral artery occlusion due to IE, which caused severe vasospasm and reocclusion after mechanical thrombectomy (MT). We present the pathologic findings of the occluded middle cerebral artery and investigate the precautions to be taken while performing MT due to IE. A 72-year-old man with atrial fibrillation treated with dabigatran presented with right hemiparesis and aphasia. A diffusion-weighted image showed a high-intensity area in the left temporoparietal junction, and magnetic resonance angiography revealed a left M2 occlusion. Because of an elevated activated partial thromboplastin time, the thrombolytic therapy was contraindicated; instead, MT was performed. Just after the withdrawal of a stent retriever, the left M2 segment showed severe vasospasm. The next day, the left M2 segment reoccluded. Transthoracic echocardiogram and blood culture findings revealed IE. On the ninth day, the patient died. According to the autopsy report, the cause of death was pulmonary embolism. Pathologic analysis of the occluded M2 segment revealed fibrin thrombi containing vast amounts of neutrophils and invasion of neutrophils into the internal elastic lamina. Severe vasospasm was thought to have occurred because the vascular injury caused by the stent retriever in the vessel had a marked inflammation background. Our findings suggest that devices that are less invasive to the vascular wall are required for performing MT due to IE. The Penumbra aspiration system is thought to be a suitable device.

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