angiography

Could CT angiography replace coronary angiography in the short term?

Original Title: CT Angiography for the Prediction of Hemodynamic Significance in Intermediate and Severe Lesions. Head-to-Head Comparison with Quantitative Coronary Angiography Using Fractional Flow Reserve as the Reference Standard. Reference: Matthew J. Budoff et al. J Am Coll Cardiol Img. 2016;9(5):559-564.   The aim of this study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy of non-invasive...

Comparing Computed Tomography vs. Angiography to Assess Transfemoral Access for TAVI

Original Title: Transfemoral Access Assessment for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Evidence Based Application of Computed Tomography over Invasive Angiography. Reference: Circ Cardiovas Imaging 2015 DOI:10.1161/CIRCIMAGING.114.0011995. Courtesy of Dr. Guillermo Migliaro Transfemoral access for TAVI was introduced in 2006 and is considered first choice. Vascular complications (VCs) are important events that correlate to increased mortality. According to the...

PROMISE Subanalysis: Potential Benefits of CT Angiography over Functional Studies in Patients with Symptoms Suggesting CAD

Original Title: Outcomes of anatomical versus functional testing for coronary artery disease. Presenter: Douglas PS. Early this year, the PROMISE trial was not able to confirm that testing patients with chest painusingcomputed tomography angiography (CTA) instead of functional tests, affects clinical outcomes, even though several sub analysis are currently suggesting other additional benefits,including enhanced diagnostic...

IVUS-XPL: IVUS superior to angiography for guiding DES implantation in long lesions

Original Title: Effect of intravascular ultrasound-guided vs angiography-guided everolimus-eluting stent implantation: the IVUS-XPL randomized clinical trial. Presenter: Hong S-J. Patients with long coronary lesions have better clinical results after a year of second generation DES implantation when interventions are guided by IVUS, instead of angiography. The benefit was attributed to a lower revascularization rate of ischemia...

Angiographic TOTAL: Sub angiography studio of TOTAL

Myocardial blush is a predictor of mortality after primary angioplasty. Small studies showed a degree of improvement blush with manual thromboaspiration. The present work is a substudy of the TOTAL where thromboaspiration Export® catheter (Medtronic cardiovascular, Santa Rosa, CA) was assessed and compared to angioplasty without thromboaspiration. A total of 1610 patients were included, (791...

FACTOR 64: Routine coronary CT angiography in patients at high risk for heart disease.

Article 900 patients with asymptomatic diabetes mellitus were randomized to CT angiography vs. Standard management. Primary end point was a combination of death, infarction and unstable angina. 63% of patients randomized to CT angiography presented some degree of heart disease and 4.7% presented severe lesions. This resulted in more coronary interventions, more use of statins...

FAMOUS NSTEMI: FFR versus Angiography in non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction

The benefit of myocardial revascularization (angioplasty or surgery) guided by fractional flow reserve (FFR) in the context of acute coronary syndromes is poorly studied in the literature. The aim of this study was to compare myocardial revascularization guided by FFR versus Angiography in patients admitted suffering a non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction. 350 patients were...

DKCRUSH-VI: FFR versus conventional angiography in true bifurcations and provisional stent

The aim of this study was to compare angioplasty guided by fractional flow reserve (FFR) versus conventional angiography in bifurcations treated with provisional stent technique for lateral branch. The study included patients with bifurcations 1,1,1 or 0,1,1 of Medina classification and lateral branches, superior to 2.5 mm. 2nd generation pharmacological stents were used.  After stent...

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