percutaneous coronary intervention

The SYNTAX Score II: a tool that should be used

Original title: Validation and Comparison of the Long-Term Prognostic Capability of SYNTAX Store-II Among 1528 Consecutive Patients Who Underwent Left Main Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. Reference: Bo Xu, et al. JACC Cardiovascular Intervention 2014;7:1128-37.   The SYNTAX angiography score is useful when deciding revascularization in multivessel, but with the addition of clinical variables in the second version, SYNTAX score...

FFR results could change over the years

Original title: The impact of age flow reserve-guided percutaneous coronary intervention: A FAME (Fractional Flow Reserve versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation) trial substudy. Reference: Hong-Seok Lim et al. International Journal of Cardiology 2014; 177:66-70 The FAME study has shown the benefit of FFR guided PCI, but the question as to whether age affects lesion evaluation remains unclear. A...

More evidence for unprotected left main PCI

Original title: Outcomes After Emergency Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Patients UIT unprotected Left Main Stem Occlusion. The BCIS National Audit of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention 6-Years Experience. Reference: Niket Patel, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol Interv 2014;7:969-80 AMI involving unprotected left main is not frequent in catheterization labs since most of these cases present in shock. There is...

The higher the bleeding risk, the greater the benefit of radial access in terms of mortality

Original title: Baseline bleeding risk and arterial access site practice in relation to procedural outcomes after percutaneous coronary intervention. Presenter: Mamas A. Mamas et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2014;64:1554-1564. The transradial approach has been associated with reduced access site related bleeding complications as well as a reduced mortality in the context of PCI. It seems...

Most of stable patients have the wrong idea about the purpose of PCI

Original title: Variation in patients’ perceptions of elective percutaneous coronary intervention in stable coronary artery disease: cross sectional study. Referencia: Kureshi F et al. BMJ. 2014;Epub ahead of print. This study included 991 consecutive patients with stable coronary disease undergoing elective PCI in 10 university and community centers between 2009 and 2011. After procedure, patients were asked a...

Resistance to Aspirin Associated to Greater Risk of In-Stent Thrombosis and Death

Original title: Aspirin Treatment and Outcomes After Percutaneous Coronary InterventionResults of the ISAR-ASPI Registry. Reference: Katharina Mayer et al. J Am CollCardiol. 2014;64(9):863-871. Aspirin administration, as part of the double antiagregation scheme, is essential in the context of PCI. The correlation between high platelet reactivity to on-clopidogrel treatment and higher events rates has been well established, while data...

Less Bleeding at the Expense of a Higher Risk of Acute Thrombosis with Bivalirudin

Original title: Bivalirudin versus heparin in patients treated with percutaneous coronary Intervention: a meta-analysis of randomised trials. Reference: Salvatore Cassese et al. EuroIntervention 2014;10-online publish-ahead-of-print August 2014. Current recommendations for the use of bivalirudin in PCI patients are mostly based on studies comparing bivalirudin vs. heparin combined with glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors. Whether bivalirudin is superior to heparin alone...

Thrombosis with bioresorbable scaffolds: the story of DES all over again?

Original title: Percutaneous coronary intervention with everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffolds in routine clinical practice: early and midterm outcomes from the European multicentre GHOST-EU registry. Reference: Capodanno D et al. EuroIntervention. 2014 Jul 18. Epub ahead of print   The GHOST-EU registry, that included 1189 patients from 10 European centers between 2011 and 2014, is now the largest registry...

SYNTAX study final monitoring at 5-years

Original title: Coronary artery bypass grafting vs. percutaneous coronary intervention for patients with three-vessel disease: final five-year follow-up of the SYNTAX trial. Reference: Eur Heart J. 2014 May 21. pii: ehu213. (Epub ahead of print). The SYNTAX study was one of the largest randomized clinical studies comparing long-term results of angioplasty versus surgery in multivessel disease and /or...

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