74 research outputs found
934-28 Sensitivity and Specificity of Angiographic Markers for Thrombus: A Prospective Comparison with Angioscopy
The limitations of angiography for the detection of intracoronary thrombus are well recognized. Between November 1991 and July 1994, we performed 402 angioscopy procedures in 225 vessels in 202 patients, with the Image-Cath (Baxter).We performed a prospective study in 190 of these patients, who had an interpretable angioscopy performed just before PTCA to determine the sensitivity and specificity of predetermined angiographic criteria that are considered to be indicative of the presence of intracoronary thrombus. Angiographically verified thrombus was used as the gold standard for comparison. Lesions were classified on angiography (2 orthogonal views) by independent observers. The presence of an intraluminal filling defect, of overhanging edges, of haziness, or of ulceration were noted. The characteristic ulceration was not mutually exclusive of the other 3 characteristics.Of 15 filling defects on angiography 14 (93%) had thrombus on angiography; in the 23 lesions with overhanging edges 19 (83%) had thrombus on angioscopy; in the 27 ulcerated lesions 21 (78%) had angioscopic thrombus; in the 6 lesions that were hazy on angiography 5 had angioscopic thrombus.AngioscopyThrombus+Thrombus-AngiographyThrombus+4512Thrombus-4093In our model, using 5 prespecified angiographic characteristics, angiography had high specificity (89%) but relatively low sensitivity (53%) for the detection of thrombus compared to angioscopy
Silent cerebral infarct after cardiac catheterization as detected by diffusion weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging: a randomized comparison of radial and femoral arterial approaches
Background and objective: Cerebral microembolism detected by transcranial Doppler (TCD) occurs systematically
during cardiac catheterization, but its clinical relevance, remains unknown. Studies suggest that asymptomatic embolic
cerebral infarction detectable by diffusion-weighted (DW) MRI might exist after percutaneous cardiac interventions with
a frequency as high as 15 to 22% of cases. We have set up, for the first time, a prospective multicenter trial to assess the
rate of silent cerebral infarction after cardiac catheterization and to compare the impact of the arterial access site,
comparing radial and femoral access, on this phenomenon.
Study design: This prospective study will be performed in patients with severe aortic valve stenosis. To assess the
occurrence of cerebral infarction, all patients will undergo cerebral DW-MRI and neurological assessment within 24
hours before, and 48 hours after cardiac catheterization and retrograde catheterization of the aortic valve.
Randomization for the access site will be performed before coronary angiography. A subgroup will be monitored by
transcranial power M-mode Doppler during cardiac catheterization to observe cerebral blood flow and track emboli.
Neuropsychological tests will also be recorded in a subgroup of patients before and after the interventional procedures
to assess the impact of silent brain injury on potential cognitive decline. The primary end-point of the study is a direct
comparison of ischemic cerebral lesions as detected by serial cerebral DW-MRI between patients explored by radial
access and patients explored by femoral access. Secondary end-points include comparison of neuropsychological test
performance and number of microembolism signals observed in the two groups.
Implications: Using serial DW-MRI, silent cerebral infarction rate will be defined and the potential influence of vascular
access site will be evaluated. Silent cerebral infarction might be a major concern during cardiac catheterization and its
potential relationship to cognitive decline needs to be assessed.
Study registration: The SCIPION study is registered through National Institutes of Health-sponsored clinical trials
registry and has been assigned the Identifier: NCT 00329979
Meta-analysis of the diagnostic performance of stress perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance for detection of coronary artery disease
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Aim</p> <p>Evaluation of the diagnostic accuracy of stress perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance for the diagnosis of significant obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) through meta-analysis of the available data.</p> <p>Methodology</p> <p>Original articles in any language published before July 2009 were selected from available databases (MEDLINE, Cochrane Library and BioMedCentral) using the combined search terms of magnetic resonance, perfusion, and coronary angiography; with the exploded term coronary artery disease. Statistical analysis was only performed on studies that: (1) used a [greater than or equal to] 1.5 Tesla MR scanner; (2) employed invasive coronary angiography as the reference standard for diagnosing significant obstructive CAD, defined as a [greater than or equal to] 50% diameter stenosis; and (3) provided sufficient data to permit analysis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>From the 263 citations identified, 55 relevant original articles were selected. Only 35 fulfilled all of the inclusion criteria, and of these 26 presented data on patient-based analysis. The overall patient-based analysis demonstrated a sensitivity of 89% (95% CI: 88-91%), and a specificity of 80% (95% CI: 78-83%). Adenosine stress perfusion CMR had better sensitivity than with dipyridamole (90% (88-92%) versus 86% (80-90%), P = 0.022), and a tendency to a better specificity (81% (78-84%) versus 77% (71-82%), P = 0.065).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Stress perfusion CMR is highly sensitive for detection of CAD but its specificity remains moderate.</p
Morbi-mortalité après angioplastie coronaire en fonction du polymorphisme génétique de la méthylène tétrahydrofolate réductase
CAEN-BU MĂ©decine pharmacie (141182102) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocSudocFranceF
Polymorphisme génétique de la glycoprotéine IIIA et angioplastie coronaire
CAEN-BU MĂ©decine pharmacie (141182102) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocSudocFranceF
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