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AsiaIntervention Sep 2018Coronary angioscopy (CAS) is a robust imaging methodology for evaluation of vascular healing response after stenting. However, the procedure requires a guiding catheter...
AIMS
Coronary angioscopy (CAS) is a robust imaging methodology for evaluation of vascular healing response after stenting. However, the procedure requires a guiding catheter with a diameter of more than 6 Fr, which is rather invasive at follow-up angiography. Recently, coronary angioscopes of a smaller diameter have been able to pass through a 4 Fr guiding catheter. This study aimed to investigate the feasibility and safety of slender CAS observation using a 4 Fr guiding catheter.
METHODS AND RESULTS
Thirty-three consecutive patients who underwent follow-up angiography were evaluated. Following usual angiography via the radial artery, the stent segment was observed by non-occlusive CAS through a 4 Fr guiding catheter. Low molecular weight dextran-L (4 mL/sec) was flushed from a guiding catheter to replace coronary blood. The success rate, anatomical or procedural factors related to the success, and incidence of adverse events were examined. The success rate was 84.8% (n=28/33). The luminal diameter at the orifice of the target vessel was larger in the successful than in the failed group (4.03±0.61 mm vs. 3.39±0.61 mm, respectively; p=0.009). The presence of deep engagement of the guiding catheter into the target vessel was a key factor for sufficient observation (100% in the successful group vs. 0% in the failed group; p<0.0001). No adverse events, such as dissection or acute coronary syndrome, were reported.
CONCLUSIONS
The new method of CAS through a 4 Fr guiding catheter demonstrated high feasibility and safety. This less invasive observation via CAS may be useful for stent follow-up.
PubMed: 36483993
DOI: 10.4244/AIJ-D-18-00003 -
Circulation Journal : Official Journal... Oct 2023
Topics: Humans; Saphenous Vein; Angioscopy; Graft Occlusion, Vascular; Calcinosis; Vascular Patency
PubMed: 37704440
DOI: 10.1253/circj.CJ-23-0421 -
Circulation Journal : Official Journal... Feb 2010Although preventive pharmacological therapies effectually reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, acute coronary syndrome (ACS) remains a leading cause of morbidity... (Review)
Review
Although preventive pharmacological therapies effectually reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, acute coronary syndrome (ACS) remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in our country, Japan. Disruption of atherosclerotic vulnerable plaques and flow-limiting thrombus formation in non-stent segments of native coronary arteries are considered a main mechanism of ACS. In addition, stent thrombosis originating from implanted metallic coronary stents, so-called vulnerable stents, occasionally appears as ACS in the clinical settings. Coronary angioscopy is a unique imaging modality permitting direct visualization of luminal structures, such as atherosclerotic plaque, thrombus, stent struts, and proliferating neointima. On the basis of accumulated angioscopic findings, intense yellow plaques and stents without neointimal coverage are considered vulnerable plaques and vulnerable stents, respectively. In contrast, morphological disappearance of vulnerable plaques or vulnerable stents by pharmacological and trans-catheter therapies imply stabilization of the plaques or stents. Hence, angioscopic assessment for vulnerability (or stability) of atherosclerotic plaques and implanted stents might be useful for risk classification in the future events of ACS. To evaluate serial changes of coronary lumen after pharmacological and catheter interventions using angioscopy might also provide important information on potential benefits and surrogate endpoints of the therapies and on patients' management.
Topics: Acute Coronary Syndrome; Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary; Angioscopy; Animals; Cardiovascular Agents; Coronary Artery Disease; Drug-Eluting Stents; Humans; Metals; Predictive Value of Tests; Prosthesis Design; Risk Assessment; Stents; Thrombosis; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome
PubMed: 20019412
DOI: 10.1253/circj.cj-09-0769 -
Journal of Interventional Cardiology Feb 2006Predicting the occurrence of future acute coronary syndromes remains an important challenge of contemporary cardiology. It is thought that detecting the individual... (Review)
Review
Predicting the occurrence of future acute coronary syndromes remains an important challenge of contemporary cardiology. It is thought that detecting the individual vulnerable plaques in patients can be an important step to preventing myocardial infarction and sudden cardiac death. Coronary angioscopy can provide detailed information of the luminal surface of plaque, such as color, thrombus, or disruption, and is one of a few possibly useful imaging modalities for identifying vulnerable plaques. During its 20-year history, coronary angioscopy has been used as a diagnostic tool or to guide coronary angioplasty, and has contributed to our understanding of the pathophysiology of coronary artery disease. Yellow plaques seen during angioscopy seem to have many characteristics of high risk or vulnerable plaques, most consistent with the thin-cap fibroatheroma. Moreover, differences in yellow color have been reported to reflect differences in the structure or composition of plaques. Development of quantitative methods to assess plaque color and histopathologic correlations in conjunction with prospective natural history studies may lead to advances in vulnerable plaque detection by coronary angioscopy. Although current angioscopic devices are limited by the need to displace the column of blood in order to see the vessel wall, and by the lack of quantitative colorimetric methods, advances in technology may lead to new device versions that could be practical for expanded clinical use.
Topics: Angioscopy; Coronary Angiography; Coronary Artery Disease; Fluoroscopy; Humans; Time Factors; Tomography, Optical Coherence; Ultrasonography, Interventional
PubMed: 16483335
DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8183.2006.00099.x -
Open Heart May 2020Coronary angioscopy (CAS) is a useful modality to assess atherosclerotic changes, but interpretation of the images requires expert knowledge. Deep convolutional neural...
BACKGROUND
Coronary angioscopy (CAS) is a useful modality to assess atherosclerotic changes, but interpretation of the images requires expert knowledge. Deep convolutional neural networks (DCNN) can be used for diagnostic prediction and image synthesis.
METHODS
107 images from 47 patients, who underwent CAS in our hospital between 2014 and 2017, and 864 images, selected from 142 MEDLINE-indexed articles published between 2000 and 2019, were analysed. First, we developed a prediction model for the angioscopic findings. Next, we made a generative adversarial networks (GAN) model to simulate the CAS images. Finally, we tried to control the output images according to the angioscopic findings with conditional GAN architecture.
RESULTS
For both yellow colour (YC) grade and neointimal coverage (NC) grade, we could observe strong correlations between the true grades and the predicted values (YC grade, average r=0.80±0.02, p<0.001; NC grade, average r=0.73±0.02, p<0.001). The binary classification model for the red thrombus yielded 0.71±0.03 F-score and the area under the receiver operator characteristic curve was 0.91±0.02. The standard GAN model could generate realistic CAS images (average Inception score=3.57±0.06). GAN-based data augmentation improved the performance of the prediction models. In the conditional GAN model, there were significant correlations between given values and the expert's diagnosis in YC grade but not in NC grade.
CONCLUSION
DCNN is useful in both predictive and generative modelling that can help develop the diagnostic support system for CAS.
Topics: Angioscopy; Coronary Artery Disease; Coronary Vessels; Deep Learning; Humans; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Predictive Value of Tests; Prognosis; Reproducibility of Results
PubMed: 32404485
DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2019-001177 -
Circulation Reports Nov 2021Drug-eluting stents (DESs) have been widely used for the treatment of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). However, there are few reports on early- and middle-phase arterial...
Drug-eluting stents (DESs) have been widely used for the treatment of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). However, there are few reports on early- and middle-phase arterial repair after DES implantation in ACS patients. Coronary angioscopy (CAS) findings covering the early and middle phases (mean [±SD] 4±1 and 10±2 months, respectively) of arterial healing after second- and later-generation DES placement between May 2009 and January 2020 were extracted from the Kansai Rosai Hospital Cardiovascular Center database. Neointimal coverage (NIC), yellow color intensity, and the incidence of thrombus adhesion were compared between ACS and chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) in the early (54 stents of 47 lesions, 38 ACS patients; 86 stents of 70 lesions, 52 CCS patients) and middle (179 stents of 154 lesions from 136 ACS patients; 459 stents of 374 lesions from 287 CCS patients) phases. In the early phase, NIC, the incidence of thrombus adhesion (ACS, 39.1%; CCS, 38.0%), and maximum yellow color grade were similar between the 2 groups. In the middle phase, although the maximum yellow color grade was significantly higher in the ACS group (P=0.013), NIC and the incidence of thrombus adhesion (ACS, 24.6%; CCS, 23.4%) were similar in the 2 groups. Arterial healing assessment with CAS showed that NIC and the incidence of thrombus adhesion after DES implantation were similar between ACS and CCS patients.
PubMed: 34805607
DOI: 10.1253/circrep.CR-21-0113 -
European Journal of Vascular and... Jul 1999to study the primary patency rates of angioscopically controlled thromboendarterectomies of the superficial femoral artery. (Clinical Trial)
Clinical Trial Review
OBJECTIVE
to study the primary patency rates of angioscopically controlled thromboendarterectomies of the superficial femoral artery.
DESIGN
prospective open study.
METHODS
between 1990 and 1995, femoropopliteal thromboendarterectomies were performed in 63 patients (41 male, 22 female). Postoperative follow up was performed at 3- to 6-month intervals using non-invasive pressure measurements plus IVDSA at 1 year.
RESULTS
eight patients were not evaluable, leaving 55 patients eligible for follow-up analysis. Postoperative complications (arteriovenous fistulas, false aneurysms) were observed in 5.4% of patients. Immediate perioperative occlusions occurred in 7.3%, early occlusions in 21.8% and late occlusions in 16.4% of all cases. The mean follow-up was approximately 57 months. The mean primary patency rate at 5 years was 44.5% (28 patients with the superficial femoral artery still open). Six patients died during the follow-up period.
CONCLUSIONS
in contrast to the very positive reports found in recent literature, this prospective study shows a lower five-year patency rate for semi-closed femoropopliteal thromboendarterectomy than for bypass grafting. Thromboendarterectomy cannot be considered as a standard procedure in revascularisation of the femoropopliteal region.
Topics: Aged; Arterial Occlusive Diseases; Chronic Disease; Endarterectomy; Female; Femoral Artery; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Intermittent Claudication; Ischemia; Leg; Male; Popliteal Artery; Postoperative Complications; Prospective Studies; Treatment Outcome; Vascular Patency
PubMed: 10388638
DOI: 10.1053/ejvs.1999.0853 -
Circulation Journal : Official Journal... 2014Although both optical coherence tomography (OCT) and angioscopy are robust tools for detecting intrastent thrombi and neoatherosclerosis in vivo, whether OCT findings... (Clinical Trial)
Clinical Trial Comparative Study
BACKGROUND
Although both optical coherence tomography (OCT) and angioscopy are robust tools for detecting intrastent thrombi and neoatherosclerosis in vivo, whether OCT findings are comparable with angioscopy findings remains unclear.
METHODS AND RESULTS
22 patients presenting with de novo lesions underwent 26 sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) implantations, with follow-up OCT and angioscopy at 10 months post-implantation for segmental assessment of the proximal, mid-, and distal SES segments (66 segments). The mean signal intensity index (signal intensity of the neointima/signal intensity of fibrous intimal hyperplasia) was quantified for angioscopically detected in-stent yellow and white segments. The detection rate for red thrombi was numerically higher with angioscopy than with OCT (17% vs. 9%; P=0.053). Angioscopically detected in-stent yellow segments were categorized into 3 OCT patterns: "high-attenuation tissue covering struts" (OCT-defined neoatherosclerosis), "high-attenuation tissue underneath struts," and "low-attenuation and low-intensity tissue covering struts"; further, macrophage-like appearance was most frequently observed with OCT-defined neoatherosclerosis (56%, 6.3%, and 0%, respectively, P<0.001). The mean signal intensity index of neoatherosclerosis was significantly lower than that of angioscopically detected in-stent white segments (0.929 vs. 0.997, P=0.004).
CONCLUSIONS
Current OCT-based definitions for thrombus detection may underestimate the presence of subclinical red thrombi. Qualitative and quantitative OCT assessments of the neointima may enhance the detection of neoatherosclerosis over SES in vivo.
Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Atherosclerosis; Coronary Angiography; Drug-Eluting Stents; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Graft Occlusion, Vascular; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Thrombosis; Tomography, Optical Coherence
PubMed: 24162928
DOI: 10.1253/circj.cj-13-0374 -
Circulation Journal : Official Journal... May 2023
Topics: Humans; Coronary Artery Disease; Angioscopy; Coronary Vessels; Coronary Angiography
PubMed: 36967132
DOI: 10.1253/circj.CJ-23-0042 -
Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan) Apr 2000
Review
Topics: Angina, Unstable; Angioscopy; Coronary Angiography; Coronary Artery Disease; Coronary Vessels; Diagnosis, Differential; Humans; Myocardial Infarction; Rupture, Spontaneous
PubMed: 10801153
DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.39.333