Synchronized coronary venous retroperfusion was applied and studied in 16 patients undergoing percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) balloon dilatation of proximal left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery stenosis. The rationale for using retroperfusion support during the PTCA-induced coronary artery occlusions was to ameliorate or prevent myocardial ischemia and possibly facilitate extension of the PTCA balloon-inflation period. After therapeutic PTCA treatment, which successfully dilated the culprit coronary artery in all 16 patients, and a 5-minute recovery period, a single retroperfusion-treated LAD occlusion (101 +/- 36 seconds) was compared with equivalent untreated control LAD occlusions (86 +/- 24 seconds) before and after the retroperfusion-supported balloon occlusion.
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