To assess the ACC/AHA task force grading system as a predictor of outcome in patients undergoing multivessel percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty we analyzed all failures (residual stenosis > 50%, Q-wave myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass grafting during hospitalization, or death) in 97 patients with 328 stenoses. There were 70 males and 27 females; 60 patients had stable angina, and 37 had unstable angina. The mean number of lesions dilated per patient was 3.4 (range 2-8). The mean preangioplasty percent luminal diameter narrowing was 80 +/- 14%. Thirty-eight stenoses were AHA/ACC classification type A, 192 type B, and 98 type C. One hundred twenty-eight lesions were located in the left anterior descending artery or its distribution, 89 in the left circumflex, 96 in the right coronary artery, and 15 in other vessels. Procedural success (< 50% residual diameter narrowing and no major ischemic complications) was achieved in 266 lesions (81.1%). Major ischemic complications (death, myocardial infarction, or emergency bypass surgery) occurred in 8 patients (8.2%) and in-hospital mortality was 2%. Analysis on a per stenosis basis demonstrated 84% success in type A, 89% in type B, and 64% in type C (p < 0.0001). When type B was divided into type B1 (1 type B characteristic) and type B2 (two or more type B characteristics) the success rate was 90% vs. 88% and the complication rate was 1% vs. 2%, respectively (p = n.s.). Logistic regression analysis showed that the best single predictor of failed angioplasty was total occlusion > 3 months, followed by total occlusion < 3 months and severely angulated (> 90 degrees) segment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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