793-1 Local, Low Pressure Heparin Delivery Following Angioplasty in Man: The Solution to Restenosls?
Journal of the American College of Cardiology 25(2): 376A-376A
Article 1995 English
Authors
EC
Edoardo Camenzind
WG
Wim van der Giesen
JL
Jürgen Ligthart
Abstract
1 min read
Of 38 patients (28 men, 58±10 years) treated by conventional balloon angioplasty followed by local heparin delivery (1660±656 IU at low pressure 110±48 mmHg during 30±7 min) through the DispatchTM (Scimed) 20 (12 men, 57±10 years). have undergone 6 month review. One 78 year old patient with aortic stenosis died in hospital 7 weeks after the procedure from acute heart failure following 2 transfusions for the exacerbation of ulcerative colitis. Of the 19 remaining patients clinical follow-up was available for all and control angiography was performed in 14 (74%). Of the 5 who declined, all asymptomatic, 3 had a negative MIBI scintigram and 2 refused further examination.
Symptoms
Five (26%) of the 19 patients were symptomatic (3 exertional and 2 atypical angina) and angiography showed 4 new lesions and 1 restenosis (diameter stenosis 60%) of the target lesion.
Angiogram
No aneurysmatic dilatation at the site of delivery was visualized. However 4 out of 14 (29%) lesions had a increase in MLD (range: 0.17–0,51 mm). Mean MLD measured by quantitative analysis (CAAS II) in matched projections (post-procedure vs 6 month follow-up) was 2.0±0.5 mm vs 1.73±0.4 mm representing a mean late loss of 0.27 mm. The incidence of restenosis, defined as a diameter stenosis at follow-up of >50% was 7%. None of patients required re-angioplasty of the treated segment.
Conclusion
Local, low pressure heparin delivery following balloon angioplasty may reduce incidence of restenosis and decrease the need for re-angioplasty.
Bernhard Reimers, Carlo Di Mario, Giampaolo Pasquetto, Clemens von Birgelen, Robert Gil, Marcel van den Brand, Wim van der Giessen, David P. Foley, Patrick W. Serruys
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.