Background: The aim of our study was to test the impact of acute lumen overdilation on neointimal hyperplasia and late lumen size after vascular brachytherapy for in-stent restenosis (ISR).
Methods: Forty-seven ISR lesions located in 47 coronary arteries in 44 consecutive patients underwent beta brachytherapy with serial intravascular ultrasound studies. Vessel, lumen, and stent cross-sectional area were measured at 1-mm steps. Based on an interpolated reference cross-sectional area, each cross section was assessed as overdilated (lumen cross-sectional area>interpolated reference cross-sectional area) or not overdilated (lumen cross-sectional area
Results: Overall, 502 sections were overdilated and 673 sections were not. Overdilated sections had a larger final lumen cross-sectional area (8.02+/-1.98 vs. 6.90+/-2.23 mm2, P<.001) and more recurrent neointimal hyperplasia (1.59+/-2.17 vs. 0.31+/-1.79 mm2, P<.001), but a smaller follow-up area stenosis (-1.03+/-32.99% vs. 22.15+/-20.75%, P<.001). This was especially true in smaller arteries (angiographic reference<3.0 mm) where larger follow-up lumen cross-sectional area and a corresponding smaller area stenosis were present (5.38+/-1.98 vs. 4.84+/-1.88 mm2 and 6.90+/-31.57% vs. 28.61+/-21.86%, P<.01 and P<.001, respectively).
Conclusions: Especially in small arteries, the strategy of acute lumen overdilation during balloon angioplasty prior to beta vascular brachytherapy treatment of ISR lesions has a favorable long-term result.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carrev.2006.07.006 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!