Abstract

Although previous optical coherence tomography (OCT) studies reported that restenosis tissue after implantation of a drug-eluting stent (DES) was composed of a variety of cells, the clinical significance of morphologic characteristics for in-stent neointimal tissue as assessed by OCT has not been clarified. We experienced a patient with stable angina who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention with a 2.5 × 18-mm DES implantation 6 months before the OCT examination. OCT imaging showed a mild intimal hyperplasia (39 % neointimal hyperplasia) with eccentric, heterogeneous tissue, predominantly of low signal intensity. Seventeen months after the initial procedure, OCT revealed a significant increase in percent neointimal hyperplasia of 58 %, with morphologically different intimal tissue of concentric homogeneous high intensity in the stented segments. This finding suggests that low-intensity intimal tissue morphology detected by OCT could be a morphometric predictor of late neointimal tissue growth after DES implantation.

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