Identification of coronary artery plaque rupture before stenting and stent edge dissection after stenting by optical coherence tomography and their management

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TitreIdentification of coronary artery plaque rupture before stenting and stent edge dissection after stenting by optical coherence tomography and their management
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuteursHuang J, Cai X, Belmadani K, Chatot M, Ecarnot F, Chopard R, Schiele F, Meneveau N
JournalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume10
Pagination12150-12157
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1940-5901
Mots-cléscoronary angiography (CAG), Coronary artery, dissection, Optical coherence tomography (OCT)
Résumé

{Background: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a high-resolution imaging modality that can provide an accurate assessment of the coronary artery plaque rupture before stenting, or edge dissection after stenting, and may subsequently provide guidance for optimizing the stenting procedure. Methods: A total of 112 patients with coronary artery disease, who underwent OCT before and after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), were enrolled into the study. Interventional procedures were performed with the ameliorated deployment of stents according to OCT. Results: Before PCI, 101 coronary lesion sites were examined, in which 12 plaque ruptures involved in intima (11.9%) were detected by OCT and only four ruptures involved in intima (4.0%) were detected by CAG (P = 0.0327). All 12 OCT-detected plaque ruptures were limited to the intima. After PCI, 180 stent edges (89 proximal and 91 distal edges) were examined, in which 48 were OCT-detected edge dissections (26.7%, 48/180) and five were CAG-detected dissections (2.8%, 5/180) (P<0.0001). Among these 48 OCT-detected dissections, 23 lesions were involved in the adventitia. including 10 lesions at the proximal edge (35.7%, 10/28) and 13 lesions at the distal edge (65.0%, 13/20