Abstract

Impaired coronary flow reserve immediately after coronary angioplasty may be attributed to an increase in resting coronary blood flow. To test this hypothesis we measured great cardiac venous flow (GCVF) at rest and during rapid atrial pacing before and immediately after angioplasty in 22 patients with significant narrowing of the left anterior descending artery and 12 patients (control group) with minimal narrowing. A follow-up (6 months) study was also done in seven patients. Immediately after angioplasty the coronary flow reserve (peak GCVF during pacing/resting GCVF) was not fully restored (1.5 ± 0.36 before angioplasty, 1.76 ± 0.42 after angioplasty, and 2.13 ± 0.33 in the control group). Resting coronary vascular resistance (2.4 ± 0.9 mm Hg/ml/min) was significantly decreased after angioplasty (2.0 ± 0.8 mm Hg/ml/min), whereas coronary vascular resistance during rapid pacing was fully restored to normal. Resting hyperemia was restored 6 months later, whereas coronary vascular resistance during pacing was unaltered. In five patients, however, slight ischemic ST-T changes were observed during rapid pacing, even after successful angioplasty associated with a decrease in the lactate extraction ratio. These results indicate that the impaired coronary flow reserve immediately after angioplasty may be attributed mainly to the temporal but significant increase in resting coronary flow, although impaired coronary vascular response to augmented myocardial oxygen demand may also be partially involved.

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