Circulation, Vol 89, 731-739, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
A Kenny and LM Shapiro
BACKGROUND: Intraoperative epicardial coronary Doppler ultrasound has the
potential to provide anatomic and functional information. This technique
has been hindered by the large size of standard transducers, but a
miniature transducer is available that may fulfill the potential of
coronary ultrasound. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty consecutive patients who
were undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting were studied and compared
with 9 control patients with normal coronary arteries who were undergoing
routine mitral valve surgery. A miniature 6.5-MHz transducer was used to
image coronary arteries and measure coronary blood flow velocities.
Seventeen proximal left anterior descending and 3 right coronary artery
stenoses were studied. As defined by coronary angiography (1 to 34 days
before surgery), there were 13 severe stenoses (> 70%), 4 moderate
stenoses (40% to 70%), 2 minor stenoses (< 40%), and 1 subtotal
occlusion. Stenoses were readily identified by ultrasound. Color flow
mapping demonstrated laminar flow in normal arteries and nonlaminar flow
across moderate and severe stenoses. In the control patients with
unobstructed arteries, peak and mean diastolic velocities were 35 +/- 2.1
and 26 +/- 1.9 cm/s with peak and mean systolic velocities of 16 +/- 1.4
and 11 +/- 0.8 cm/s, respectively. Prestenotic flow velocities were not
significantly different from normal control values, but a wide range of
poststenotic flow disturbances were detected. Analysis of the 20 study
patients did not reveal significant differences in poststenotic compared
with prestenotic flow. A subgroup analysis of 12 patients with severe left
anterior descending coronary artery stenoses was performed, and reversed
poststenotic systolic flow was seen in 9. Prestenotic peak and mean
systolic velocities were 16.5 +/- 1.7 and 11.9 +/- 1.1 cm/s, respectively,
and were significantly altered downstream of the stenoses at -22.7 +/- 17.2
and -15.9 +/- 10.9 cm/s (P < .05 and P < .01, respectively). Reversed
systolic flow was seen only distal to severe left anterior descending
coronary artery stenoses and did not correlate with retrograde collateral
filling as determined by preoperative coronary angiography. Moderate
stenoses appeared to increase both systolic and diastolic components of
poststenotic flow. CONCLUSIONS: Epicardial Doppler ultrasound with a
miniature transducer identifies coronary stenoses and associated blood flow
disturbances. Compared with moderate lesions, severe stenoses demonstrated
different poststenotic flow patterns. Intraoperative use of this technique
may determine the hemodynamic significance of coronary stenoses.
ARTICLES
Identification of coronary artery stenoses and poststenotic blood flow patterns using a miniature high-frequency epicardial transducer
Regional Cardiac Unit, Papworth Hospital, Papworth Everard, Cambridge, UK.
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