Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention

Many coronary interventionists have a perception that the radial route may not facilitate complex PCI. This study evaluates the association between target lesion morphology, vessel characteristics and angiographic outcome in elective PCI cases carried out through radial versus femoral artery approac...

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Main Authors: Osama Tayeh, Federica Ettori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2014-03-01
Series:The Egyptian Heart Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111026081300080X
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spelling doaj-05e89c8c2a1c43e08d3528048da310bd2020-11-25T00:03:07ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Heart Journal1110-26082014-03-01661273310.1016/j.ehj.2013.08.004Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary interventionOsama Tayeh0Federica Ettori1Critical Care Department, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, EgyptCardiothoracic Department, Spedali Civili, Brescia University, ItalyMany coronary interventionists have a perception that the radial route may not facilitate complex PCI. This study evaluates the association between target lesion morphology, vessel characteristics and angiographic outcome in elective PCI cases carried out through radial versus femoral artery approach. Methods: Elective PCI cases over a 23 month period at a tertiary care hospital were reviewed for this analysis. Modified ACC/AHA classification was used to ascertain the impact of different arterial accesses in elective PCI on the angiographic outcome with the complex angiographic lesion morphologies. Results: 343 Patients and 407 lesions were analyzed. Radial access was the final route in 253 procedures treating a total of 300 lesions, while femoral access was the final route in 90 PCI procedures for treating 107 lesions. Lesion complexity incidence in radial PCI group by using modified ACC/AHA classifications A, B1, B2, and C were 4.67%, 15%, 60.33% and 20%, respectively. While in the femoral PCI, the incidence of lesion types was 6.54%, 15.89%, 42.99%, and 34.58%, respectively. By summation of the complex end of the spectrum for ACC/AHA lesion types B2 plus C, the incidence was 241 lesions (80.33%) in radial PCI vs. 83 lesions (77.57%) in femoral PCI, P = 0.25. Angiographic successful outcome according to the combined end point was achieved in 283 lesions (94.33%) for radial PCI vs. 92 lesions (85.99%) in femoral PCI, P = 0.004. Conclusion: This study confirms that a default radial PCI is an effective strategy for the majority of complex lesions in elective PCI.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111026081300080XPercutaneous coronary interventionVascularLesion morphology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Osama Tayeh
Federica Ettori
spellingShingle Osama Tayeh
Federica Ettori
Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
The Egyptian Heart Journal
Percutaneous coronary intervention
Vascular
Lesion morphology
author_facet Osama Tayeh
Federica Ettori
author_sort Osama Tayeh
title Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
title_short Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
title_full Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
title_fullStr Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
title_full_unstemmed Vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
title_sort vascular access and angiographic lesion morphology in elective percutaneous coronary intervention
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Heart Journal
issn 1110-2608
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Many coronary interventionists have a perception that the radial route may not facilitate complex PCI. This study evaluates the association between target lesion morphology, vessel characteristics and angiographic outcome in elective PCI cases carried out through radial versus femoral artery approach. Methods: Elective PCI cases over a 23 month period at a tertiary care hospital were reviewed for this analysis. Modified ACC/AHA classification was used to ascertain the impact of different arterial accesses in elective PCI on the angiographic outcome with the complex angiographic lesion morphologies. Results: 343 Patients and 407 lesions were analyzed. Radial access was the final route in 253 procedures treating a total of 300 lesions, while femoral access was the final route in 90 PCI procedures for treating 107 lesions. Lesion complexity incidence in radial PCI group by using modified ACC/AHA classifications A, B1, B2, and C were 4.67%, 15%, 60.33% and 20%, respectively. While in the femoral PCI, the incidence of lesion types was 6.54%, 15.89%, 42.99%, and 34.58%, respectively. By summation of the complex end of the spectrum for ACC/AHA lesion types B2 plus C, the incidence was 241 lesions (80.33%) in radial PCI vs. 83 lesions (77.57%) in femoral PCI, P = 0.25. Angiographic successful outcome according to the combined end point was achieved in 283 lesions (94.33%) for radial PCI vs. 92 lesions (85.99%) in femoral PCI, P = 0.004. Conclusion: This study confirms that a default radial PCI is an effective strategy for the majority of complex lesions in elective PCI.
topic Percutaneous coronary intervention
Vascular
Lesion morphology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111026081300080X
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AT federicaettori vascularaccessandangiographiclesionmorphologyinelectivepercutaneouscoronaryintervention
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