Abstract

In 100 consecutive patients undergoing multivessel percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), dilation was attempted in 207 arteries. Primary success was achieved in 85 patients. Complications occurred in 8 patients: acute myocardial infarction in 5 and need for emergency coronary artery bypass surgery in 5. Control angiography was done in 77 of 85 patients (91%) with primary success at a mean of 12 ± 6 months. Complete revascularization had been achieved in 59 patients and incomplete revascularization in 18. Angiographic restenosis was found in 39 of 77 patients (51%) and in 47 of 143 arteries (33%) at 9 ± 7 months. The restenosis rate was 57% for chronic total occlusions (8 of 14) and 30% for stenoses (39 of 129). The restenosis rate was significantly higher for the left anterior descending coronary artery (40%) than for the left circumflex coronary artery (21%). However, the significance was lost after exclusion of chronic total occlusions. A higher residual stenosis and a high coronary wedge pressure were predictors for restenosis. Restenosis was clinically silent in 14 patients (18%). Repeat PTCA was done in 19 patients with recurrence and elective surgery in 8. Clinical follow-up was available in all patients at 24 ± 12 months. Patients with incomplete revascularization had less favorable clinical follow-up results than patients with complete revascularization: 44% (8 of 18) vs 81% (48 of 59) were asymptomatic (p < 0.005), and 28% (5 of 18) vs 5% (3 of 59) had undergone elective bypass surgery during follow-up (p < 0.005). Most patients with restenosis after multivessel PTCA had only 1-vessel restenosis and only 7% had restenosis of all lesions.

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