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A Fully Magnetically Levitated Circulatory Pump for Advanced Heart Failure Nuclear Imaging of the Cardiac Sympathetic Nervous System: A Disease-Specific Interpretation in Heart Failure Long-term survival in patients undergoing percutaneous interventions with or without intracoronary pressure wire guidance or intracoronary ultrasonographic imaging: a large cohort study In acute HF and iron deficiency, IV ferric carboxymaltose reduced HF hospitalizations, but not CV death, at 1 y Can Biomarkers of Myocardial Injury Provide Complementary Information to Coronary Imaging? Intravascular ultrasound-guided systematic two-stent techniques for coronary bifurcation lesions and reduced late stent thrombosis Impact of Myocardial Scar on Prognostic Implication of Secondary Mitral Regurgitation in Heart Failure Clinical epidemiology of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) in comparatively young hospitalized patients Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction in the Young Treatment strategies for coronary in-stent restenosis: systematic review and hierarchical Bayesian network meta-analysis of 24 randomised trials and 4880 patients

Clinical TrialVolume 10, Issue 8, August 2017, Pages 869-879

JOURNAL:JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. Article Link

In Vivo Calcium Detection by Comparing Optical Coherence Tomography, Intravascular Ultrasound, and Angiography

Wang X, Matsumura M, Mintz GS et al. Keywords: angiography; calcification; intravascular ultrasound; optical coherence tomography

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES- The aim of this study was to evaluate optical coherence tomography (OCT) and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) versus coronary angiography in the assessment of target lesion calcification and its effect on stent expansion.


BACKGROUD - IVUS is more sensitive than angiography in the detection of coronary artery calcium, but the relationship among IVUS, OCT, and angiography has not been studied.


METHODS - Overall, 440 lesions (440 patients with stable angina) underwent OCT- and IVUS-guided stent implantation. Coronary calcification was evaluated using: 1) angiography; 2) IVUS (maximum calcium angle and the surface pattern); and 3) OCT (mean and maximum calcium angle, calcium length, and maximum calciumthickness).


RESULTS - Median patient age was 66 years, and 82.5% were men. Among 440 lesions, calcium was detected by angiography in 40.2%, IVUS in 82.7%, and OCT in 76.8%. The maximum calcium angle, maximum calciumthickness, and calcium length by OCT or IVUS increased in relation to the increasing severity of angiographically visible calcium. In 13.2% of lesions with IVUS-detected calcium, calcium was either not visible or was underestimated (>90° smaller maximum arc) by OCT mostly due to superficial OCT plaque attenuation. In 21.6% of lesions with IVUS calcium angle >180°, angiography did not detect any calcium; these lesions had thinner and shorter calcium deposits as assessed using OCT, and final minimum stent area was larger compared to those with angiographically visible calcium. In lesions with thinner calcium deposits by OCT, IVUS detected a smooth surface with reverberations whereas thick calcium deposits were associated with an irregular surface without reverberations.


CONCLUSIONS - Angiographic detection of target lesion coronary calcium (compared to intravascular imaging) has not changed in the past 2 decades, and angiographically invisible calcium (only detectable by IVUS or OCT) did not appear to inhibit stent expansion.