(Circulation. 2000;101:946.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
Editorial |
From the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif.
Correspondence to David P. Faxon, MD, Professor of Medicine, Chief, Division of Cardiology, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, 1355 San Pablo St, Suite 117, Los Angeles, CA 90033. E-mail dfaxon@hsc.usc.edu
Key Words: Editorials restenosis angioplasty prognosis coronary blood flow
The ability to
accurately predict restenosis after angioplasty continues to be
elusive, despite two decades of clinical and angiographic studies.
Although these studies have shown that a number of clinical,
procedural, and angiographic factors are related to recurrence
of the stenosis, the overall predictive value of these factors
remains low.1 Angiographic factors have been most
extensively studied and variable, such as ostial lesion location,
proximal lesion location, left anterior descending artery lesion
location, bifurcation lesion, eccentric lesion, and long lesion, and
those vessels receiving collaterals have been shown to have a
higher rate of restenosis as well. Perhaps one of the most
important advances in our understanding of restenosis has been
the relationship between the final minimal lumen diameter (MLD), or
residual stenosis, and the likelihood of developing
restenosis. Often termed "bigger is better," the inverse
relationship between final MLD or percent stenosis and
restenosis has been widely studied and well
validated.2 The principal of obtaining the largest
possible luminal opening during the procedure is now the primary goal
of all angioplasty procedures and is the major explanation for why
stents reduce restenosis and why their use has become so
popular. Even in very large databases, MLD correctly predicted the
occurrence of restenosis in only 30% of patients. The price
paid for a bigger lumen, however, is more renarrowing, due to
unfavorable remodeling and exaggerated intimal hyperplasia.
Fortunately, Mother Nature has been kind and, in the clinical setting,
only renarrows the artery to roughly half the initial gain in lumen
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A. E. Ajani, R. Waksman, D.-H. Cha, L. Gruberg, L. F. Satler, A. D. Pichard, and K. M. Kent The impact of lesion length and reference vessel diameter on angiographic restenosis and target vessel revascularization in treating in-stent restenosis with radiation J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., April 17, 2002; 39(8): 1290 - 1296. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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