The aim of this study was to investigate the immediate and long-term outcome of patients who were treated with rotational atherectomy (RA) to facilitate the delivery of drug eluting stents (DES) in heavily calcified lesions. We analyzed 150 consecutive patients who underwent RA and subsequently DES implantation in our institution. The patients had heavily calcified coronary artery lesions requiring plaque modification prior to conventional angioplasty and stent implantation. Rotational atherectomy was performed using the standard Boston Scientific Rotablator system. A 2-burr stepped approach was selected in most of the cases. Following successful modification of the plaque, the angioplasty was performed with a balloon at low pressure to avoid dissection and a DES was implanted. The mean follow up period was 3 years (max. 78 months). Follow-up data included all cause death, stroke, myocardial infarction (MI), recurrent angina, re-hospitalization, target lesion revascularization (TLR), target vessel revascularization (TVR), and long-term duration of dual antiplatelet therapy. The rate of recurrent angina and MI during follow up was low (3.3%) and the overall major adverse cardiac events (MACE) rate was 11.3%. No MACE occurred during hospitalization. There was no relationship between discontinuation of clopidogrel and occurrence of death or MI. The combined approach of RA-DES has a favorable effect when dealing with heavily calcified lesions in both the angiographic and clinical outcomes. No safety concerns are observed up to 6 years.
Spatially correct three-dimensional reconstruction of human coronary arteries constitutes an imaging method with considerably high in-vivo feasibility and accuracy.
ongestive heart failure is the main cause of death in transfusion-dependent homozygous -thalassaemia (thalassaemia major (TM)) patients. When symptoms of heart failure appear, death usually occurs within 1 year. 1,2 Although cardiac death is the most common cause of death in patients with TM, early markers of cardiac function with prognostic impact on survival have not yet been adequately defined. Deposition of iron in the heart is the major determinant of survival in these patients. 3,4 Left ventricular (LV) restrictive filling pattern (RFP), as assessed by Doppler-echocardiography, is a well-recognized feature of TM patients with normal LV systolic function, 5 although debated by some authors. 6,7 LVRFP, as assessed by Doppler-echocardiography, is characterized by an increase of the peak early to peak late filling velocity ratio (>2) and/or shortened deceleration time of early filling (<150 ms) because of impaired ventricular compliance. 8,9 Doppler-demonstrated LVRFP is an ominous sign in a variety of cardiac diseases with concomitant systolic heart failure, 10-13 but the clinical significance of restrictive physiology in TM patients has not yet been well established.The purpose of this longitudinal study was to investigate
Circulation Journal Vol.70, August 2006the impact of the Doppler-demonstrated LV filling pattern and also the impact of compliance with chelation therapy on survival in a cohort of asymptomatic TM adult patients with normal LV systolic function throughout a 15-year observation period.
Methods
Patients and Study ProtocolAll patients gave written informed consent and the protocol of this study was reviewed and approved by the institutional review board. Sixty-five consecutive TM patients, who were followed-up in the Thalassaemia Unit, were considered candidates for the analysis. All patients initially underwent clinical evaluation, chest X-ray, 12-lead ECG and Doppler-echocardiography from May 1989 to August 1989, in order to obtain baseline data, and then they were examined periodically by clinical examination and Dopplerechocardiography up to the end of the data collection (May 2004). The endpoint of the study was death from cardiovascular causes. Patients' inclusion criteria were: (1) age ≥14 years at the initial examination, (2) normal LV end-diastolic diameter (=55 mm) and normal LV systolic function (fractional shortening =30%), as assessed by echocardiography and (3) absence of any symptom of cardiac and/or pulmonary pathology.Among the 65 patients initially evaluated, 20 were excluded for the following reasons: 11 were <14 years of age; 4 had LV fractional shortening <30%; 5 died from non-car-
Methods and ResultsThe study group comprised 45 asymptomatic transfusion-dependent patients with TM and normal LV systolic function. All patients were chelated with desferrioxamine. They were regularly evaluated by clinical and Doppler-echocardiographic studies throughout the 15-year follow-up period. The patients were categorized into 2 groups according to baseline data: those with LVRFP an...
Recently, a new interventional guide catheter, the GuideLiner™ catheter, was introduced into the market as a strategy for tackling the problem of stent delivery failure. We implemented this simplified child-in-mother technique in a series of 16 challenging coronary interventions. Balloon and stent delivery was successfully achieved in all cases and the device was both simple to deploy and remove. Apart from two cases of vessel dissection that were managed successfully with stent implantation, no other serious procedural complications were reported.
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