Abstract

The clinical and angiographic outcome of patients undergoing rotational coronary atherectomy after unsuccessful balloon angioplasty was evaluated using quantitative angiographic methods to provide insight into this procedure's mechanism of benefit. During the study period, 41 patients (50 lesions) were referred for rotational atherectomy after standard balloon angioplasty was unsuccessful. After rotational atherectomy, percent diameter stenosis was reduced from 72 ± 14% to 41 ± 16% (p < 0.001); adjunct balloon angioplasty was performed in 44 lesions (88%), resulting in a 25 ± 17% final diameter stenosis (p < 0.001). The acute gain in minimal lumen diameter was 1.20 ± 0.59 mm. In lesions needing adjunct balloon dilatation, lesion stretch was 73 ± 27%, and elastic recoil was 22 ± 18%, with no variation by etiology of the initial balloon failure. Overall angiographic success (<50% residual diameter stenosis) was obtained in 49 lesions (98%). Procedural success, defined as <50% residual diameter stenosis and the absence of major in-hospital complications (death, Q-wave myocardial infarction or emergency bypass surgery), was obtained in 37 of 41 procedures (90%); complications developed in 3 patients (7%), including 2 who needed emergency bypass surgery after development of delayed abrupt closure. It is concluded that rotational coronary atherectomy may be used in selected patients when standard balloon angioplasty is unsuccessful. Its mechanism of benefit appears related, at least in part, to changes in plaque compliance resulting from partial atheroma ablation.

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