The Spider™ Peripheral Detachable Coil System in its detachable pushable configuration is engineered by Invamed—a global medical device manufacturer—to address peripheral aneurysm occlusion, vascular malformations, or fistulae requiring controlled coil placement. By offering a pushable yet detachable delivery mechanism, Spider™ affords the precision of in-place detachment without the complexity of electrolytic release, optimizing procedural control and reducing risk of coil migration.
Combines the ease of a pushable coil insertion with the detachment control typically associated with mechanical or electrolytic systems, enabling safe retrieval or repositioning before final deployment.
High radiopacity ensures real-time fluoroscopic monitoring, helping interventionalists confirm accurate coil positioning and packing density.
The flexible coil design adapts to complex vessel anatomies or aneurysmal sacs, minimizing stress on fragile vessel walls.
Ideal for small-to-moderate peripheral aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), or abnormal vascular communications, delivering precise occlusion.
Aneurysm repair (e.g., peripheral, visceral), AVM or fistula occlusion in peripheral territories, or general endovascular procedures requiring dense coil packing.
Vessels too small or tortuous to pass the delivery catheter, active infection at the access site, or scenarios where coil retrieval is not feasible.
Combines the ease of a pushable coil insertion with the detachment control typically associated with mechanical or electrolytic systems, enabling safe retrieval or repositioning before final deployment.
High radiopacity ensures real-time fluoroscopic monitoring, helping interventionalists confirm accurate coil positioning and packing density.
The flexible coil design adapts to complex vessel anatomies or aneurysmal sacs, minimizing stress on fragile vessel walls.
Ideal for small-to-moderate peripheral aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), or abnormal vascular communications, delivering precise occlusion.
Aneurysm repair (e.g., peripheral, visceral), AVM or fistula occlusion in peripheral territories, or general endovascular procedures requiring dense coil packing.
Vessels too small or tortuous to pass the delivery catheter, active infection at the access site, or scenarios where coil retrieval is not feasible.

