According to previous studies, patients receiving bilateral internal mammary artery conduits during coronary artery bypass grafting have better survival than those receiving a single internal mammary artery. The reason behind this remains unclear, let alone whether there really is lower repeat revascularization rate. This analysis compared timing, frequency, and type of repeat coronary revascularization among patients...
Latest articles about peripheral vascular diseases
1) Efficacy of Micromesh-Covered Stents in Carotid Artery Stenting Most literature, old and recent, associates carotid artery stenting with a higher rate of stroke (although minor) when compared with carotid endarterectomy during the acute period. However, 30-day outcomes of angioplasty and surgery are comparable. Read more 2) Multivessel Disease and Severe Carotid Stenosis: How to Proceed Myocardial revascularization surgery (CABG) is...
DKCRUSH-V: Left Main, Not Just Another Bifurcation
Cardiac Artery Bypass Graft Surgery has been shown more effective than percutaneous coronary intervention (basically because it renders lower revascularization rate) in patients with severe left main bifurcation lesions receiving 1st generation drug eluting stents. This is why the 2014 American guidelines recommend CABG for most patients. But the EXCEL and the NOBLE trials brought back hope to...
DKCRUSH-V: What Is Simple Is Not Always Best for the Left Main Coronary Artery
Courtesy of the SBHCI. Angioplasty of true distal left main bifurcation lesions with a double-kissing (DK) crush two-stent strategy, compared with provisional stenting, results in lower rates of target lesion failure at 1 year. These findings were largely driven by lower rates of target vessel infarction and definite/probable stent thrombosis. Read also: “EXCEL-QOL Substudy: Similar Quality...
HREVS: Hybrid Revascularization Offers No Advantage in Multivessel Disease
Courtesy of SBHCI. Hybrid revascularization, which combines CABG with PCI, failed to reduce myocardial ischemia and major cardiac and cerebrovascular events, compared to cardiac artery bypass graft or PCI separately. However, this small study does not provide conclusive evidence, which calls for further randomized studies with enough statistical power to answer this question. Fortunately, we won’t have...
Multivessel Disease and Severe Carotid Stenosis: How to Proceed
Myocardial revascularization surgery (CABG) is the most frequent of all cardiovascular surgeries and is still the gold standard to treat multivessel disease. Between 6 and 8% of these patients present concomitant carotid stenosis and it is associated with increased peri and post procedural stroke rates during and after surgery. To prevent carotid stenosis, either PCI or endarterectomy...
Introducing the number one enemy of PCI: diabetes
About 25% of patients with multivessel disease undergoing myocardial revascularization surgery or PCI have diabetes. In this subgroup, the benefit of surgery in terms of mortality has long been shown: in the BARI study (Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation) patients undergoing PCI had close to double the mortality rate at 5 years compared to those...
Striking Finding on Diabetes and Bypass Graft Patency
The higher rate of restenosis in the diabetic population is historic and has been reproduced in all studies and with all kinds of stents, but it was only after the FREEDOM trial when we found out about the higher infarction rate with PCI compared to surgery. This is why 50% of patients undergoing CABG are diabetic. Apart from the above...
New generation DES present better results in vein grafts than older DES and BMS
There is little information comparing contemporary drug eluting stents (DES) against bare metal stents (BMS), for PCI in saphenous vein grafts in patients receiving (CABG). This study aimed to assess clinical outcomes after PCI in saphenous vein grafts in patients receiving BMS, first generation DES, and new generation DES between 2006 and 2013. The study...
The use of IVUS in unprotected left main PCI associated to better outcomes, compared to angiography guided PCI
Courtesy of Dr. Gustavo Leiva. Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) has traditionally been the procedure of choice in patients with left main coronary artery disease. However, the use of percutaneous techniques in this kind of lesions has been on the rise, partly due to recent research showing similar outcomes with both procedures. Unprotected left main...