Abstract

BackgroundDue to the technical limitations of coronary artery angiography (CAG), ramus intermedius (RI) is sometimes difficult to distinguish from a high-origin obtuse marginal branch or a high-origin diagonal branch. This study sought to investigate the role of intravascular ultrasonography (IVUS) in the rectification of angiographically judged RI.MethodsThis study retrospectively analyzed 165 patients who were reported to have an RI based on CAG and underwent IVUS implementation from 02/01/2009 to 31/12/2019 in Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University. Taking IVUS as the gold standard, we calculated the accuracy of RI identification by CAG and evaluated the impact of RI on revascularization strategy.ResultsAmong the 165 patients, 89 patients (54%) were demonstrated to have an RI on IVUS (IVUS-RI), 32 patients (19%) were identified to have a high-origin diagonal branch on IVUS (IVUS-h-D), and 44 patients (27%) had an actual high-origin obtuse marginal artery on IVUS (IVUS-h-OM). Among 84 patients who underwent one-stent crossover stenting because of left main furcation lesions (48 patients in the IVUS-RI group, 12 patients in the IVUS-h-D group, and 24 in the IVUS-h-OM group), 14.6% of patients in the IVUS-RI group, 33.3% in the IVUS-h-D group and 0% in the IVUS-h-OM group had CAG-RI compromise (P = 0.02), which was defined as severe stenosis of the RI ostium (> 75%) or significant RI flow impairment (TIMI < 3).ConclusionsOnly 54% of CAG-RIs were confirmed by IVUS, which indicates the necessity of preintervention IVUS to distinguish real RIs from other branches in LM furcation lesions.

Highlights

  • Due to the technical limitations of coronary artery angiography (CAG), ramus intermedius (RI) is sometimes difficult to distinguish from a high-origin obtuse marginal branch or a high-origin diagonal branch

  • The current study found that only 54% of angiographically judged RIs were confirmed by intravascular ultrasonography (IVUS); IVUS-high-origin obtuse marginal artery (h-OM) is rarely occluded during left main coronary artery (LMCA)-left anterior descending artery (LAD) crossover stenting

  • Our findings suggest that preintervention IVUS is necessary to distinguish IVUS-h-OM from IVUS-RI and IVUS-high-origin diagonal branch (h-D), and the revascularization strategy needs to be tailored to different types of crossover stenting on different angiographically judged RIs (CAG-RIs)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Due to the technical limitations of coronary artery angiography (CAG), ramus intermedius (RI) is sometimes difficult to distinguish from a high-origin obtuse marginal branch or a high-origin diagonal branch. The ramus intermedius (RI) is a variant coronary artery resulting from bifurcation of the left main coronary artery (LMCA) [1]. It is diagnosed on autopsy [2]. RI has increasingly been observed by Anatomically, RI is different from a high-origin obtuse marginal artery (h-OM) or a high-origin diagonal branch (h-D). It is as important as these prominent early branches because it has a similar course and perfusion region to h-OM or h-D [1].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call