For patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction and multivessel disease beyond the culprit artery, complete revascularization is superior to culprit-only treatment as regards the final endpoint, a composite of cardiovascular death, infarction, and ischemia-driven revascularization over a mean follow-up of 3 years. This information derives from long-awaited randomized study COMPLETE, finally presented at the...
Optimal Revascularization Time in Transient STEMI
Patients admitted with transient ST elevation MI and later normalize completely (symptimos disappear before being treated) are those we normally say are “undergoing a non-ST elevation MI”. This is complex, because revascularization time remains nuclear, as is whether to treat them as STEMI or non-STEMI patients. The aim of this study was to determine the...
The “Ten Commandments” of Myocardial Revascularization According to Europe
The new European guidelines on myocardial revascularization were developed by a joint effort of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the European Association of Cardiovascular Surgery (EACTS). These guidelines are intended to support clinical practice with pragmatic recommendations based on currently available evidence and on personal experience, whenever evidence is missing. Both coronary angioplasty...
Myocardial Revascularization Surgery Hits a Plateau
Hopes were raised high by the ARTS study, when set to show the benefit of bilateral internal mammary arteries (BIMA) during coronary artery bypass graft surgery compared over the use of a single internal mammary artery (SIMA) at 10 year follow up, but only one sub-study was able to show an advantage over radial grafts....
Hybrid Revascularization or Conventional Surgery: History Is Still Being Written
Hybrid revascularization seems to achieve results similar to those of conventional myocardial revascularization surgery at 5 years, although studies published so far do not seem to be enough for a definitive answer. This new work, soon to be published in J Am Coll Cardiol Intv, has had promising results in selected patients with multivessel disease; however,...
Do the Best Coronary Revascularization Prior TAVR
The presence of coronary artery disease (CAD) in patients with aortic stenosis is high, reaching 50% to70% of cases. This poses a great challenge as to what strategy to use and the things we can do. Even though it has been shown complete revascularization is beneficial, it is often difficult to achieve. Instead, reasonable incomplete...
Additional Benefit from Radial Artery Graft in Myocardial Revascularization Surgery
Used to different extents according to institution, surgeon, and historical time, the radial artery graft is yet to prove whether it can improve the outcomes of myocardial revascularization surgery when added to a single or bilateral internal thoracic artery graft. The ART (Arterial Revascularization Trial) was designed to compare survival after bilateral vs. single left internal...
COMPARE-ACUTE: FFR-Guided Non-Culprit Vessel Revascularization in Primary Angioplasty
Courtesy of the SBHCI. About 50% of patients admitted with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction also present lesions in another vessel. Whether to treat these or not, and the optimal moment to treat non-culprit infarction-related vessels are still controversial issues. The COMPARE-ACUTE study was recently published and showed that fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided complete...
FFR-Guided ACS Revascularization Apparently Superior to Culprit Vessel Treatment
Using fractional flow reserve (FFR) to guide revascularization of all functionally significant lesions in the setting of acute coronary syndrome appears to improve outcomes over treating only the culprit artery, according to the Compare-Acute trial. This study, conducted at 24 centers in Europe and Asia, enrolled 885 patients who were stable following successful primary angioplasty and...
HYBRID: Hybrid revascularization in patients with multi-vessel
We included 200 patients (100 with hybrid revascularization and 100 with conventional surgery). The complete revascularization rate was similar between both groups (70%). Also, the event-free survival was similar with 92% for conventional surgery group and 89% for the hybrid. The revascularization of the anterior descending artery with breast bridge and angioplasty to the rest...