Objective: One patient with severe heart failure (LV 92 mm, EF 28%) was treated by cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT).
Method: During the operation, it was found that double superior vena cava coexisted, and selective coronary venography cannot clearly show every branch. It was difficult to push ventriculus sinister electrode to sideward vein, so the electrode was released to far end of frontal septal branch along great cardiac vein.
Result: However, because of insufficient braced force of ventriculus sinister electrode, 0.014 PTCA guide wire was detained in the electrode. 2 years later, two spots of PTCA guide wire retained in ventriculus sinister electrode broke in atrium dextrum, so the implantation of epicardial electrode was conducted.
Conclusion: After the operation, heart failure was relieved. After 43 months, the battery of pacemaker depleted, so the pacemaker was changed. The effect since follow-up visit was good, LV decreased to 86 mm, EF increased to 32%, and SPWMD time limit shortened from 147 ms to 45 ms. The therapeutic experience of this patient indicated that the effect of detaining PTCA guide wire to enhance braced force in implantation of ventriculus sinister is unreliable and inappropriate to be advocated.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4613122 | PMC |
The guide extension-facilitated ostial stenting (GEST) technique uses a guide extension catheter (GEC) to improve stent delivery during primary coronary angioplasty (PCI). GECs are used for stent delivery into the coronary arteries of patients with difficult anatomy due to tortuosity, calcification, or chronic total occlusion (CTO) vessels. Stent and balloon placement has become challenging in patients with increasing lesion complexity due to tortuosity, vessel morphology, length of the lesion, and respiratory movements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatheter Cardiovasc Interv
January 2025
HartCentrum Ziekenhuis Aan de Stroom (ZAS) Middelheim, Antwerp, Belgium.
Rev Cardiovasc Med
December 2024
Department of Cardiology, Bern University Hospital, Inselspital, CH-3010 Bern, Switzerland.
In-stent restenosis (ISR) remains the predominant cause of stent failure and the most common indication for repeat revascularization. Despite technological advances in stent design, ISR continues to pose significant challenges, contributing to increased morbidity and mortality among patients undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions. In the last decade, intravascular imaging has emerged as an important method for identifying the mechanisms behind ISR and guiding its treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatheter Cardiovasc Interv
January 2025
Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Background: Advancing the retrograde microcatheter (MC) into the antegrade guide catheter during retrograde chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) can be challenging or impossible, preventing guidewire externalization.
Objectives: To detail and evaluate all the techniques focused on wiring to achieve intubation of the distal tip of a microcatheter, balloon, or stent with an antegrade or retrograde guidewire, aiming to reduce complications by minimizing tension on fragile collaterals during externalization and enabling rapid antegrade conversion in various clinical scenarios.
Methods: We describe the two main techniques, tip-in and rendezvous, and their derivatives such a facilitated tip-in, manual MC-tip modification, tip-in the balloon, tip-in the stent, deep dive rendezvous, catch-it and antegrade microcatheter probing.
Clin Ter
November 2024
Department of Biomedical and Dental Sciences and Morphofunctional Imaging, University of Messina, Messina, Italy.
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