Coronary angioplasty or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) reduces angina and improves quality of life in patients with stable ischemic cardiomyopathy, though the ORBITA study has shed new light on this. Meanwhile, we will assume this is indeed the case, until new studies either confirm or refute the above mentioned, controversial study. Either way, it is...
Practical Management of Coronary Perforations
Coronary perforation has an incidence of 0.5% and it is associated with a 13-fold increase in in-hospital events and a 5-fold increase in 30-day mortality. This event is so catastrophic that its management has become indispensable knowledge to all interventional cardiologists. This accident is most frequently provoked by artery over-dilation caused by a balloon or...
EXCEL Sub-Study: The Site of the Left Main Coronary Artery Lesion Does Not Alter History
The EXCEL study, originally presented at TCT 2016 and published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), showed that angioplasty and surgery in patients with left main coronary artery disease have similar rates of mortality, infarction, and stroke at 3 years. This sub-study, recently published in J Am Coll Cardiol Intv, adds that the...
Should Sex Be Taken into Account with Left Main Coronary Artery Revascularization?
The EXCEL trial did not find the sex of patients with left main coronary artery disease to be an independent predictor of adverse events after revascularization. However, women who underwent angioplasty had a trend towards worse outcomes, a finding that might be related to comorbidities and somewhat increased chances of peri-procedural complications. In its formal...
First Results for Ticagrelor in Elective Coronary Angioplasty
This is one of the first studies on the use of ticagrelor in patients with stable coronary arteries who undergo elective angioplasty. Although its number of patients is low and its endpoints are soft, this work at least provides some support to what is already happening in daily clinical practice. Many patients admitted for a...
Coronary Angioplasty Is a Valid Alternative for Left Main Coronary Artery Disease
Courtesy of Dr. Carlos Fava. Severe left main coronary artery (LMCA) lesions have a bad prognosis in coronary disease. In that scenario, current guidelines recommend surgery as the treatment of choice. However, due to the current development of second-generation drug-eluting stents (DES) and greater operator expertise, left main coronary artery angioplasty appears as a valid alternative...
Same-day discharge after coronary angioplasty is increasingly popular but still not the gold standard
The length of hospital stay after elective coronary angioplasty varies significantly among operators and hospitals, according to a recent survey of interventional cardiologists in the United States (US), Canada, and the United Kingdom (UK), published in Catherization and Cardiovascular Interventions. While same-day discharge is a routine proceeding in the UK, most interventional cardiologists surveyed mentioned...
Percutaneous Mitral Annuloplasty: First Results in Humans
Courtesy of Dr. Agustín Vecchia. In the last few years, new percutaneous treatment options for mitral regurgitation have emerged. Transcatheter mitral annuloplasty with various devices is a relatively simple procedure that could compress the origin of circumflex artery branches due to the different orientation of mitral corners and the coronary sinus. The following work by Park...
Interventionists Used to the Radial Approach No Longer Associated with Worse Femoral
The transradial approach is being increasingly adopted as preferred access site, since it is more comfortable for patients, reduces vascular and bleeding complications, is cost effective and reduces mortality in high risk patients. This has created concern about the fact that operators and institutions could become unfamiliar with the transfemoral approach. The aim of...
Left Main Coronary Artery Angioplasty vs. Surgery: A Large Meta-Analysis
Courtesy of Dr. Carlos Fava. Around 5% of patients undergoing coronary angiography present severe left main coronary artery (LMCA) lesions. Myocardial revascularization surgery (MRS) is the preferred method for this group, although there is evidence from different randomized trials demonstrating the safety and efficacy of unprotected LMCA angioplasty, with results similar to those obtained through the traditional strategy....