Abstract
Recurrent acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is a deteriorated condition with high in-hospital morbidity and mortality, but the predictors of in-hospital outcome after primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for repeat AMI remain unclear. Using the AMI-Kyoto Multi-Center Risk Study database, clinical background, angiographic findings, results of primary PCI, and in-hospital prognosis were retrospectively compared between primary PCI-treated AMI patients with previous myocardial infarction (MI) (repeat-MI patients, n=235) and those without previous MI (first-MI patients, n=1,550). The repeat-MI patients had higher prevalence of Killip class>or=3 at admission, larger number of diseased vessels, and a significantly higher in-hospital mortality rate than the first-MI patients. On multivariate analysis, number of diseased vessels>or=2 or diseased left main trunk (LMT) on initial coronary angiography was the independent positive predictor of in-hospital mortality in the repeat-MI patients, not in the first-MI patients, whereas acquisition of Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction 3 flow in the infarct-related artery immediately after primary PCI and elapsed time<24 h were the negative predictors in the first-MI patients, not in the repeat-MI patients. Number of diseased vessels>or=2 or diseased LMT on initial coronary angiography is an independent risk factor of in-hospital death in recurrent-AMI patients undergoing primary PCI.
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