Circulation, Vol 85, 2185-2196, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
JM Isner, K Rosenfield, CJ White, S Ramee, M Kearney, A Pieczek, RE Langevin Jr and S Razvi
BACKGROUND. The pathological consequences of cardiovascular laser
irradiation have been studied extensively in vitro. Previous in vivo
studies of laser-induced injury have included analyses of acute and/or
chronic findings in experimental animals. Little information, however, is
available regarding the acute effects of laser irradiation of human
vascular tissues in vivo. METHODS AND RESULTS. To determine the acute
pathology resulting from laser irradiation of human vascular tissue in
vivo, specimens retrieved from 23 patients by directional atherectomy
immediately after laser angioplasty (19 peripheral and four coronary) were
examined by light microscopy. Of the 23 patients, three (13.0%) were
treated with a metal-capped ("hot-tip") fiber coupled to a continuous-wave
neodymium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Nd:YAG) laser using up to 18 W power and
18-305 seconds of cumulative exposure time; in all three patients (100%),
thermal injury, including frank charring several cell layers thick, was
seen along the luminal borders of the atherectomy specimen. In eight of the
23 patients (34.5%), laser angioplasty was performed using a
250-microseconds holmium:YAG laser at fluences up to 2,300 mJ/mm2, a
repetition rate of 5 Hz, and 25-200 seconds of cumulative exposure; in
seven of eight patients (85.5%), the atherectomy specimen showed signs of
vacuolar injury consisting of central and satellite Alcian-blue-negative
vacuoles. In two patients (25.0%), there was a "smudged" or "shredded"
edge, whereas in one patient, frank signs of thermal injury were observed.
Finally, in 12 of the 23 patients (52.2%), laser angioplasty was performed
using a 120- nsec excimer laser at fluences up to 60 mJ/mm2, a repetition
rate of 25 Hz, and a cumulative exposure time of 21-315 seconds.
Pathological findings among these 12 patients were limited to nine patients
(75%) in whom a weakly basophilic, smudged, and/or shredded appearance
approximately one cell layer thick was observed along the luminal border of
the atherectomy specimen and two patients (16.7%) with small foci of
vacuolar injury. None of the atherectomy specimens retrieved after excimer
laser angioplasty disclosed signs of thermal injury. CONCLUSIONS. These
findings document that acute pathological alterations resulting from in
vivo laser angioplasty are variable, depending on the laser source used,
and are similar to that predicted by experimental studies performed
previously in vitro. The prognostic implications of these varying
pathological features remain to be clarified.
ARTICLES
In vivo assessment of vascular pathology resulting from laser irradiation. Analysis of 23 patients studied by directional atherectomy immediately after laser angioplasty
Department of Medicine (Cardiology), St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA.
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