Abstract

C ase presentation A: A 50-year-old diabetic man presented to the hospital after 8 hours of continuous chest pain. Because of acute myocardial infarction of the anterior wall, he underwent direct stenting to an occlusion in the left anterior descending coronary artery. Despite revascularization, suboptimal coronary flow was achieved, and he subsequently developed heart failure. Case presentation B: A 77-year-old man underwent elective stenting of a significant stenosis in a degenerated saphenous vein coronary bypass graft. After the procedure, coronary flow in the graft was severely reduced, and he sustained a myocardial infarction in the subtended myocardial territory. The concept of “no reflow” refers to a state of myocardial tissue hypoperfusion in the presence of a patent epicardial coronary artery. The underlying cause of no reflow is microvascular obstruction, which may be produced by various mechanisms. No reflow can be classified according to the duration of the preceding myocardial ischemia (Figure 1). “Reperfusion no reflow” occurs after primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for reperfusion of an infarct artery in the setting of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and may be asymptomatic or may present clinically with continued chest pain and ST-segment elevation. Reperfusion no reflow is preceded by ischemic cell injury, is confined to the irreversibly damaged necrotic zone, and may be exacerbated at the time of reperfusion. Reperfusion no reflow is an independent predictor of adverse clinical outcome after AMI regardless of infarct size and is associated with heart failure and increased mortality.1 Figure 1. Schematic illustrating the effect of duration of preceding myocardial ischemia on mechanism of no reflow (NR). “Interventional no reflow” follows noninfarct PCI and affects myocardium that was not subjected to prolonged ischemia before the procedure. Clinically recognized interventional no reflow that complicates PCI is typically sudden in onset, presenting as acute ischemia with chest …

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