Abstract

To investigate the consequences of different hemodynamic criteria as indications for stent placement after suboptimal iliac angioplasty. One hundred thirty-six patients with intermittent claudication, on the basis of atherosclerotic disease of the iliac artery, underwent angioplasty. Intraarterial systolic and mean pressures were simultaneously recorded above and below the lesion, with and without vasodilation, and before and after percutaneous angioplasty. These data were used to estimate what proportion of the study population would be eligible for stent placement according to different criteria reported in the literature. Subsequently, the authors compared peak systolic velocity (PSV) ratios during follow-up in their patients, with and without indication for stent placement according to two different criteria. Applying the different thresholds reported in the literature to the patient group shows that stent placement would be indicated in anywhere from 4% to 87% of cases. No difference was observed when PSV ratios were compared in patients with a residual mean pressure gradient of > or = 5 and < or = 10 mm Hg with patients with a residual mean pressure gradient of less than 5 mm Hg. Application of the various published thresholds as indications for secondary stent placement leads to a wide range in proportion of cases requiring stent placement. Lesions with a residual mean pressure gradient of > 5 and < 10 mm Hg fare as well as lesions with a residual mean pressure gradient of less than 5 mm Hg. The optimal criterion is still not clear.

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