Abstract

Balloon angioplasty (percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, PTCA) is an established common strategy in the treatment of acute myocardial infarction (MI) with high success rates but a 5–10% incidence of reclosure/reinfarction due to thrombus and/or intimal flaps. Directional coronary atherectomy (DCA) by removing plaque/thrombus and achieving larger postprocedural luminal diameter may further decrease the incidence of reclosure/reinfarction, with a resultant better in-hospital outcome in this setting. We analyzed the clinical, procedural and in-hospital outcome of patients who underwent DCA or PTCA within 48 h of MI. Long lesions (>20 mm), large angiographic intracoronary thrombus, lesions in a bend, heavy calcification, and vessel diameter <3.0 mm were excluded from the study. Although slow flow occurred more frequently during DCA (17 vs. 9% during PTCA, p = 0.04), procedural success (<50% final diameter stenosis with TIMI-3 flow) was achieved in 96% of DCA and 92% of PTCA group (nonsignificant). Acute closure occurred in 9% of the PTCA group versus 2% of the DCA (p = 0.05), and the composite endpoint of in-hospital reinfarction, reintervention, bypass surgery or death was present in 9% of PTCA cases versus none of DCA cases (p = 0.03). There were no major peripheral vascular complications requiring surgery in either group. Therefore, DCA appears safe and effective in selected patients with recent MI, and is associated with a low incidence of major clinical complications.

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