Title of article :
Intravascular ultrasound predictors of restenosis after percutaneous transcatheter coronary revascularization
Author/Authors :
Gary S. Mintz، نويسنده , , Jeffrey J. Popma، نويسنده , , Augusto D. Pichard، نويسنده , , Kenneth M. Kent، نويسنده , , Lowell F. Satler، نويسنده , , Tzu-Chien Chuang، نويسنده , , Jennifer Griffin، نويسنده , , Martin B. Leon، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages :
10
From page :
1678
To page :
1687
Abstract :
Objectives. This study sought to evaluate preintervention and postintervention intravascular ultrasound studies for potential predictors of angiographic restenosis and to use ultrasound predictors of restenosis to enhance our understanding of the pathophysiology of the restenosis disease process. Background. Restenosis remains the major limitation of percutaneous transcatheter coronary revascularization. Although its mechanisms remain incompletely understood, numerous studies have identified some of the clinical, anatomic and procedural risk factors for restenosis. Intravascular ultrasound imaging of target lesions before and after catheter-based treatmetn consistently demonstrates more target lesion calcium, more extensive reference segment atherosclerosis, smaller final lumen dimensions, significant residual plaque burden and greater degree of tissue traum than is evident by angiography. Methods. Intravascular ultrasound studies were performed in 360 nonstented native coronary artery lesions (final diameter stenosis 18 ± 11%) in 351 patients for whom follow-up angiographic dat were available 6.4 ± 3.6 months later. Hospital charts were reviewed, and qualitative and quantitative coronary angiographic and intravascular ultrasound analyses were performed by independent core laboratories. Four dependent angiographic end points were tested: restenosis as binary definition (greater-or-equal, slanted50% diameter stenosis at follow-up) was the primary end point; follow-up diameter stenosis, late lumen loss and follow-up minimal lumen diameter were the secondary end points. Results. Reference vessel size, the preintervention quantitative coronary angiographic assessment of lesion severity and the postintervention intravascular ultrasound cross-sectional measurements predicted the late angiographic results. In particular, the intravascular ultrasound postintervention cross-sectional narrowing (plaque plus medi cross-sectional are divided by external elastic membrane cross-sectional area) predicted the primary end point (restenosi) and two of the three secondary end points (follow-up diameter stenosis and late lumen loss) and was therefore the most consistent predictor of restenosis. Conclusions. Intravascular ultrasound variables are more powerful and consistent predictors of angiographic restenosis than currently accepted clinical or angiographic risk factors.
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Serial Year :
1996
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Record number :
479588
Link To Document :
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