Initial Thrombosuction with Subsequent Angioplasty in Primary Coronary Intervention?Comparison with Conventional Strategy
Resource
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY v.102 n.1 pp.121-126
Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
Journal Volume
v.102
Journal Issue
n.1
Pages
121-126
Date Issued
2005
Date
2005
Author(s)
KAO, HSIEN-LI
Abstract
Background: Large thrombus burden remains challenging in the setting of acute myocardial infarct. Initial thrombosuction (IT) followed by actual angioplasty may be advantageous over conventional strategy in primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Methods: With a case-control design, 22 consecutive patients receiving primary PCI with IT were designated as group 1. Another 22 well-matched patients undergoing primary PCI with conventional strategy in the same period were enrolled as group 2. Clinical and angiographic outcomes, procedural parameters and resource usage were compared. Results: Baseline characteristics were comparable, including the symptom onset-to-needle time (250? ?101 vs. 261??149 min, p= NS). Total procedure time (33??14 vs. 47??20 min, p=0.011), fluoroscopy time (10??6 vs. 16??10 min, p=0.014) and contrast medium consumption (140? ?40 vs. 170??50 ml, p=0.024) were all significantly reduced with group 1. No-reflow occurred less frequently with group 1 (5% vs. 32%, p=0.046) during intervention, and TIMI 3 flow was established more quickly (19??10 vs. 30??20 min, p=0.024). Final TIMI 3 flow rates and stent rates were similar. The time to myocardial enzyme peak was shorter with group 1 (9.7 ??3.1 vs. 12.8??6.3 h, p=0.048), but no difference was found in 3 months cumulative major cardiac adverse event rates. Conclusions: Primary PCI with IT achieves earlier reperfusion and is more efficient in terms of time and resource, comparing to conventional strategy.
Subjects
Thrombus aspiration
Acute myocardial infarction
Percutaneous coronary angioplasty
No-reflow
Stent
Type
journal article