AI Article Synopsis

  • Pharmacoinvasive strategy, which combines thrombolysis with non-immediate angioplasty, was found to have comparable left ventricular outcomes to primary angioplasty in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.
  • Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging showed no significant differences in infarct size, myocardial salvage, or major heart events between the two treatment methods over a 1-year follow-up.
  • Both strategies resulted in similar short-term and long-term health outcomes, suggesting that pharmacoinvasive treatment is a viable alternative to primary angioplasty.

Article Abstract

Introduction And Objectives: Pharmacoinvasive strategy represents an attractive alternative to primary angioplasty. Using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging we compared the left ventricular outcome of the pharmacoinvasive strategy and primary angioplasty for the reperfusion of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.

Methods: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance was performed 1 week and 6 months after infarction in two consecutive cohorts of patients included in a prospective university hospital ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction registry. During the period 2004-2006, 151 patients were treated with pharmacoinvasive strategy (thrombolysis followed by routine non-immediate angioplasty). During the period 2007-2008, 93 patients were treated with primary angioplasty. A propensity score matched population was also evaluated.

Results: At 1-week cardiovascular magnetic resonance, pharmacoinvasive strategy and primary angioplasty patients showed a similar extent of area at risk (29±15 vs. 29±17%, P=.9). Non-significant differences were detected by cardiovascular magnetic resonance at 1 week and at 6 months in infarct size, salvaged myocardium, microvascular obstruction, ejection fraction, end-diastolic volume index and end-systolic volume index (P>.2 in all cases). The same trend was observed in 1-to-1 propensity score matched patients. The rate of major adverse cardiac events (death and/or re-infarction) at 1 year was 6% in pharmacoinvasive strategy and 7% in primary angioplasty patients (P=.7).

Conclusions: A pharmacoinvasive strategy including thrombolysis and routine non-immediate angioplasty represents a widely available and logistically attractive approach that yields identical short-term and long-term cardiovascular magnetic resonance-derived left ventricular outcome compared to primary angioplasty.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.recesp.2010.10.008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pharmacoinvasive strategy
28
primary angioplasty
28
cardiovascular magnetic
24
magnetic resonance
20
strategy primary
16
st-segment elevation
12
elevation myocardial
12
angioplasty
9
outcome pharmacoinvasive
8
angioplasty reperfusion
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!