Directional coronary atherectomy in acute myocardial infarction.

G Dangas, R Mehran, S Duvvuri, R Vidhun, J A Ambrose, S K Sharma
Author Information
  1. G Dangas: Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory, Mount Sinai Cardiovascular Institute, New York, NY 10029, USA.

Abstract

Balloon angioplasty (percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, PTCA) is an established common strategy in the treatment of acute myocardial infarction (MI) with high success rates but a 5-10% incidence of reclosure/reinfarction due to thrombus and/or intimal flaps. Directional coronary atherectomy (DCA) by removing plaque/thrombus and achieving larger postprocedural luminal diameter may further decrease the incidence of reclosure/reinfarction, with a resultant better in-hospital outcome in this setting. We analyzed the clinical, procedural and in-hospital outcome of patients who underwent DCA or PTCA within 48 h of MI. Long lesions (>20 mm), large angiographic intracoronary thrombus, lesions in a bend, heavy calcification, and vessel diameter <3.0 mm were excluded from the study. Although slow flow occurred more frequently during DCA (17 vs. 9% during PTCA, p = 0.04), procedural success (<50% final diameter stenosis with TIMI-3 flow) was achieved in 96% of DCA and 92% of PTCA group (nonsignificant). Acute closure occurred in 9% of the PTCA group versus 2% of the DCA (p = 0.05), and the composite endpoint of in-hospital reinfarction, reintervention, bypass surgery or death was present in 9% of PTCA cases versus none of DCA cases (p = 0.03). There were no major peripheral vascular complications requiring surgery in either group. Therefore, DCA appears safe and effective in selected patients with recent MI, and is associated with a low incidence of major clinical complications.

MeSH Term

Aged
Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary
Atherectomy, Coronary
Coronary Angiography
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Myocardial Infarction

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0DCAPTCA0coronaryMIincidencediameterin-hospital9%p=groupangioplastyacutemyocardialinfarctionsuccessreclosure/reinfarctionthrombusDirectionalatherectomyoutcomeclinicalproceduralpatientslesionsmmflowoccurredversussurgerycasesmajorcomplicationsBalloonpercutaneoustransluminalestablishedcommonstrategytreatmenthighrates5-10%dueand/orintimalflapsremovingplaque/thrombusachievinglargerpostproceduralluminalmaydecreaseresultantbettersettinganalyzedunderwentwithin48hLong>20largeangiographicintracoronarybendheavycalcificationvessel<3excludedstudyAlthoughslowfrequently17vs04<50%finalstenosisTIMI-3achieved96%92%nonsignificantAcuteclosure2%05compositeendpointreinfarctionreinterventionbypassdeathpresentnone03peripheralvascularrequiringeitherThereforeappearssafeeffectiveselectedrecentassociatedlow

Similar Articles

Cited By