Circulation, Vol 83, 1976-1986, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
U Rosenschein, LA Rozenszajn, L Kraus, CC Marboe, JF Watkins, EA Rose, D David, PJ Cannon and JS Weinstein
BACKGROUND. Ultrasonic angioplasty was recently shown to ablate thrombi and
atherosclerotic plaques in vitro and to recanalize occluded arteries in
experimental animal models. The goal of the present study was to examine
the clinical feasibility of ultrasonic angioplasty. METHODS AND RESULTS.
Intraoperative ultrasonic angioplasty was performed in vivo on totally
occluded peripheral arteries (n = 7). The ultrasonic angioplasty device
consists of a 1.6-mm diameter flexible wire attached to a piezoelectric
crystal generating ultrasound at 20 kHz. The controls, totally occluded
human atherosclerotic femoral arterial segments (n = 6), were crossed
mechanically with the ultrasound wire ex vivo but without application of
ultrasonic energy. Ultrasonic angioplasty achieved successful
recanalization without perforation in all vessels. Angiograms of the
treated arteries showed an average lumen patency of 82.5%. Histological
examination of the recanalized arteries revealed that the recanalization
had taken place through intima diffusely involved with complicated plaque.
The treated arteries, compared with the controls, had greater area of
recanalized lumen (5.9 +/- 1.8 versus 1.7 +/- 0.4 mm2, p less than 0.05)
and more flow (49.3 +/- 16.0 versus 11.8 +/- 4.9 ml/min, p less than 0.03).
The damage in treated and control arteries was similar. Size-distribution
analysis of the plaque debris from the treated arteries showed that 41 +/-
5% of the debris was 0.2-8 microns, 48 +/- 8% was 8-30 microns, and the
remainder was 30-100 microns. In the mechanically crossed arteries, there
was a shift in the distribution to larger size debris with 47 +/- 1%
greater than 100 microns (p less than 0.001). CONCLUSIONS. Ultrasonic
angioplasty may be a useful clinical method for recanalization of total
occlusions in patients with peripheral vascular disease. Ultrasonic energy
appears to cause controlled injury to the atherosclerotic intima by
selectively disrupting the ultrasound- sensitive occlusion.
ARTICLES
Ultrasonic angioplasty in totally occluded peripheral arteries. Initial clinical, histological, and angiographic results
Division of Cardiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York.
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