Abstract
Background In the era of coronary stenting with high-pressure expansion, stent thrombosis remains a major life-threatening risk. Because of its superior imaging mode, intracoronary ultrasound could provide insight into potential risk factors for stent thrombosis. Patients and Methods In 215 patients with stent implantations controlled by intracoronary ultrasound, four occurrences of subacute stent thrombosis, two complete acute thrombotic occlusions, and four occurrences of incomplete acute thrombosis were observed. All stents were expanded with inflation pressures of at least 14 atm (17 ± 3 atm). The clinical data and the qualitative and quantitative ultrasound information were compared between stents with thrombosis and stents without thrombosis. The luminal area and the plaque border of the reference segments, and of the smallest and largest site of the stented segment after the initial and final expansion, were measured. Results Stents in the left anterior descending artery were more often involved in stent thrombosis than other vessels, but the vessel dimensions in this target vessel were smaller than in the right coronary artery. The plaque burden was considerably larger after stent implantation with subsequent thrombosis compared with no thrombosis (74.1 ± 8.8% vs 63.6 ± 8.0%; p < 0.001), and the stent area was smaller (4.80% ± 1.33 mm 2 vs 6.86 ± 2.08 mm 2; p < 0.01). In stents with thrombosis the plaque burden of the stent site with the smallest and largest lumen differed by 15.2%, whereas the difference in plaque burden in stents without thrombosis was 2.7%. Intracoronary ultrasound showed that the best risk predictor of thrombosis was the residual plaque burden of the stented segment (odds ratio 15.7 [confidence interval 2.4 to 104.7]), and a small stent area after implantation (odds ratio 6.8 [confidence interval 1.9 to 24.3]). Conclusion In a multivariate risk analysis plaque burden was the strongest independent risk factor for stent thrombosis. The amount of residual plaque mass around the stent might be a potential trigger for thrombus formation. (Am Heart J 1998;135:300-9.)
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