Cerebral ischemic events associated with arteriography are usually attributed to catheter-induced emboli. We present three patients with cerebral ischemia occurring 6 to 48 hours post-arteriography. We suspected that alternate pathogenic mechanisms were in effect. To evaluate the possibility that sustained platelet activation occurs in association with arteriography, we measured the platelet-specific protein beta thromboglobulin (BTG) prior to and 24 hours following arteriography in two groups of patients. Group I had arteriography performed shortly after venipuncture, while Group II patients did not have arteriography between samples. Seven of eight Group I patients had an increase of BTG on day two, compared with two of eight group II patients (p less than 05). When compared to Group II changes, Group I had a significant increase of BTG on day two (p less than .05). We conclude that cerebral ischemic events associated with arteriography may occur on a delayed basis, and that platelet activation, manifested by increased BTG levels, may be one mechanism contributing to this phenomenon.
Critical ostial left main disease may lead rapidly to sudden death and is, therefore, of paramount importance to diagnose. While the number of cardiac catheterizations is increasing, government and third party reimbursement sources are imposing pressure to perform more studies in an outpatient setting, as the economic resources for medical procedures are shrinking. Outpatient cardiac catheterization requires the patient to ambulate within several hours after the procedure. In order to allow patients to safely ambulate early after their procedures, 5 French catheters are often used (whether the femoral or brachial approach is used) rather than the standard 7 French catheters. We describe a patient with an ostial left main stenosis that was not visualized when coronary arteriography was performed using a diagnostic 5 French catheter. Selective intubation of the left main coronary artery was easily achieved without damping of the pressure tracing. Selective coronary angiography did not demonstrate the ostial stenosis, and there appeared to be a normal amount of contrast refluxing into the aortic root. When the patient returned for an angioplasty and a guiding angiogram was performed with an 8 French catheter, an ostial stenosis was evident with coronary angiography.
Atherosclerotic plaques may not be demonstrated adequately by standard anteroposterior (AP)-lateral projections of carotid arteriography. We evaluated selective carotid arteriography in oblique projections for 60 individual carotid arteries. Two neuroradiologists evaluated arteriograms in four separate sessions devoted to AP-lateral views alone and in combination with oblique projections. The lumen surface was characterized as "smooth," "irregular," or "ulcerated." When oblique projections were added to AP-lateral views, there was a significant shift of radiologic diagnosis from smooth to irregular or ulcerated. Addition of oblique projections to standard AP-lateral views increases the radiographic diagnosis of carotid artery lesions that may be the source of emboli.
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