====== Reentry Technique ====== A reentry [[technique]] is an [[endovascular]] maneuver used to restore access to the true [[lumen]] of a [[vessel]] after unintended subintimal passage of a guidewire or catheter during angioplasty or stenting. 🧠 Context of Use Most commonly used in chronic total occlusions (CTOs) of peripheral, coronary, or cerebrovascular arteries. In carotid or vertebral arteries, subintimal entry is sometimes unavoidable in near-occlusion or heavily calcified lesions. A reentry device or angled catheter is used to penetrate the intimal layer and redirect the guidewire into the true lumen distally. 🛠️ Types of Reentry Techniques Device-Assisted (Dedicated Tools): Outback™, Pioneer Plus™, OffRoad™, etc. Often with needle-based targeting or IVUS guidance. Wire-Based Manual Techniques: Looping the wire in the subintimal space and probing for reentry “Knuckle wire” technique "Reentry with support catheter" 📌 Indications Subintimal dissection during angioplasty of: Common/Internal Carotid Artery (CCA/ICA) Superficial femoral artery (SFA) Coronary arteries (CTO PCI) Salvage of misdirected guidewire path Crossing flush occlusions without a proximal stump ⚠️ Risks & Considerations Perforation Distal embolization Dissection propagation Need for embolic protection in cerebral circulation “Reentry techniques are the vascular equivalent of re-entering orbit after drifting off-course — high-stakes, high-skill, and best done with the right tools.”