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Intravascular ultrasound evaluation of equivocal angiographic imaging during percutaneous coronary intervention of bifurcation lesions

Abstracts

The use of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) to guide stent implantation in bifurcation lesions, especially for the detection of procedure-related complications, has decreased the rates of major clinical outcomes. We report a case of a patient undergoing bifurcation intervention, where the guidewire inadvertently was passed behind the proximal stent struts, deforming the stent edge. This complication was suspected at the angiography and was confirmed by IVUS. IVUS was crucial for the diagnosis, to confirm the correct repositioning of the guidewire, and to assess the optimal expansion and complete apposition of stent struts, thus preventing a possible early thrombotic event and ensuring a good long-term outcome.

Coronary stenosis; Ultrasonography, interventional; Angioplasty; Stents; Coronary angiography


O uso do ultrassom intracoronário (USIC) para guiar o implante do stent em bifurcações, especialmente na detecção de complicações relacionadas ao procedimento, tem diminuído as taxas de desfechos clínicos maiores. Neste artigo, reportamos o caso de um paciente submetido a intervenção em bifurcação, em que o fio-guia ultrapassou inadvertidamente por trás das hastes proximais do stent, levando à deformação de sua borda. A complicação foi suspeitada na angiografia e confirmada com o USIC. O USIC foi fundamental no diagnóstico, na confirmação do reposicionamento correto do fio-guia, e na avaliação da ótima expansão e da aposição completa das hastes do stent, prevenindo possível desfecho trombótico precoce e garantindo o resultado a longo prazo.

Estenose coronária; Ultrassonografia de intervenção; Angioplastia; Stents; Angiografia coronária


CASE REPORT

Intravascular ultrasound evaluation of equivocal angiographic imaging during percutaneous coronary intervention of bifurcation lesions

Arturo R. QuizhpeI; Carlos OrtegaII; Diego Carrión MonsalveIII; María Fernanda GonzálezIV; María Augusta CórdovaV; Juan Vintimilla GarateVI; Maritza SiguenzaVII

IPhysician; Interventional cardiologist at the Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga Haemodynamics Unit. Cuenca, Ecuador

IIPhysician; Cardiologist at the Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga Cardiology Service. Cuenca, Ecuador

IIIMedical Intern at the Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga Internal Medicine Clinic. Cuenca, Ecuador

IVPhysician at the Hospital Santa Inés. Cuenca, Ecuador Haemodynamics Unit

VPhysician; Cardiologist and echocardiographist at the Hospital Santa Inés. Cuenca, Ecuador Cardiology Service

VIPhysician; Cardiologist and echocardiographist at the Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga. Cuenca, Ecuador Cardiology Service

VIIImaging specialist at the Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga. Cuenca, Ecuador Haemodynamics Unit

Correspondence to Correspondence to: Arturo R. Quizhpe Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga Rayoloma y Popayan - Cuenca, Ecuador E-mail: riquizimo@yahoo.es

ABSTRACT

The use of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) to guide stent implantation in bifurcation lesions, especially for the detection of procedure-related complications, has decreased the rates of major clinical outcomes. We report a case of a patient undergoing bifurcation intervention, where the guidewire inadvertently was passed behind the proximal stent struts, deforming the stent edge. This complication was suspected at the angiography and was confirmed by IVUS. IVUS was crucial for the diagnosis, to confirm the correct repositioning of the guidewire, and to assess the optimal expansion and complete apposition of stent struts, thus preventing a possible early thrombotic event and ensuring a good long-term outcome.

Descriptors: Coronary stenosis. Ultrasonography, interventional. Angioplasty. Stents. Coronary angiography.

Coronary lesions located within bifurcations represent 20% of percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs) and provide both a clinical and a technical challenge, as the procedure has a low rate of angiographic success, a high number of complications, and a high chance of restenosis and late thrombosis.1 Incomplete apposition and inadequate expansion of drug-eluting stents (DES) have been associated with an increased risk of early and late thrombosis, which result in high morbidity and mortality rates.2

The difference between the diameters of the main vessel and the lateral branch usually causes malapposition of the proximal stent segment immediately after implantation, which must be corrected by post-dilatation using the kissing balloon technique or inflating a short balloon with the main vessel diameter (proximal optimisation technique).

The use of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) has helped overcome several angiography limitations. For bifurcation intervention evaluation, IVUS allows for the determination of the atherosclerotic plaque characteristics and the selection of the best treatment, as well as optimisation of the expansion and apposition of stent struts.3

The present study reports the case of a patient who had PCI in bifurcations during a drug-eluting stent implantation that was assessed by IVUS due to the presence of an equivocal image during the procedure.

CASE REPORT

A 56-year-old male patient was transferred from a community hospital due to typical chest pain that lasted for 24 hours at rest and was associated with electrocardiogram alterations (sinus rhythm and symmetric inversion of the T wave in V1 to V5). He was treated with 100 mg aspirin, an initial dose of 600 mg clopidogrel and 75 mg maintenance doses, 20 mg simvastatin, 25 mg atenolol, and 70 mg enoxaparin every 12 hours.

Based on the findings, a decision was made to perform invasive risk stratification by coronary angiography.

Coronary angiography

The left anterior descending artery had 80% lesions in the proximal third with an image that suggested intracoronary thrombus at the first diagonal branch bifurcation. Importantly, the diagonal branch demonstrated no significant atherosclerotic lesions (Figure 1A). The left circumflex and right coronary arteries demonstrated mild diffuse parietal irregularities.



Procedure

Vascular access was obtained radially, followed by EBU 3.5 6-F guide-catheter positioning at the left coronary trunk origin. An intracoronary tirofiban bolus was administered. The 0014 PT Graphix guidewire was advanced past the lesion and placed in the distal segment of the left anterior descending artery, and another Choice floppy guidewire was introduced in the diagonal branch. A 3.5 x 33 mm CypherTM stent (Cordis - Miami, USA) was implanted in the left anterior descending artery in crossover with the diagonal branch (Figure 1B) and released at 9 atm. Post-implantation angiographic control demonstrated Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) III flow, a smaller proximal stent diameter than the proximal reference of the left anterior descending artery, a diagonal branch with a 90% lesion at its origin, and an image that suggested an intracoronary thrombus that was most likely displaced from the left anterior descending artery. Post-dilation was used simultaneously with the kissing balloon technique and proximal optimisation aiming to correct the proximal stent diameter and improve residual diagonal branch stenosis. Before post-dilation, the left anterior descending artery guidewire was pulled up to the origin of the diagonal branch and advanced through the stent struts, easily reaching the middle third of this vessel. The diagonal branch guidewire was then retreated to the guide catheter interior, reintroduced into the left anterior descending artery through the already implanted stent lumen, and advanced to the distal third of the artery (Figure 1C).

After performing the kissing balloon technique with a Sequent 3 x 20 mm balloon that was inflated to 12 atm in the left anterior descending artery, and a Sequent 3 x 20 mm balloon that was inflated to 10 atm and directed to the diagonal branch (Fig. 1 D), dilatation of the proximal third of the stent was performed with a Quantum 4 x 12 mm balloon at 12 atm. The guidewire in the diagonal branch was retreated and the final angiographic control was performed. However, an equivocal image (haziness) was observed in the proximal stent border, thus IVUS was performed (Figure 2). IVUS demonstrated strut deformity in the proximal stent border with the IVUS catheter positioned outside the stent lumen. The guidewire was also outside the stent lumen in its proximal border (Figure 3 A and B). This guidewire was left in the same position, and another guidewire was advanced through the crushed struts followed by a new IVUS evaluation, which confirmed its correct position (Figures 3 C and D).




With the guide wire inside the stent, a new postdilation was performed with a noncompliant Quantum 4 x 12 mm balloon at 12 atm. The IVUS performed at that time revealed proximal border dissection, and it was chosen to implant a new CypherTM 3.5 x 13 mm stent at 18 atm in the proximal border. The final IVUS evaluation demonstrated favourable outcome without left anterior descending artery lesions (Figure 4).


The patient recovered uneventfully after the PCI, was discharged, and is currently asymptomatic.

DISCUSSION

PCIs within bifurcations are independent predictors of stent thrombosis and are associated with catastrophic clinical consequences, mortality in 20% to 48% of cases, and stroke in 60% to 70% of cases.4 Stent thrombosis is a complex process that results from the interaction of factors that are related to the patient, the lesion, the implanted device, and the technique used. The provisional stent strategy of the lateral branch is employed in over 80% of bifurcations and is associated with low stent thrombosis rates. However, if the lateral branch is thickened with an atherosclerotic lesion that extends beyond 5 mm from the origin, a two stent implanting strategy becomes necessary, although the best technique has yet to be established.5

This case had a lesion type of 1,1,0 (Medina classification) with < 70-degree angle, main vessel proximal reference diameter of 3.2 mm, distal reference diameter of 2.7 mm and lateral vessel diameter of 2.2 mm. The provisional T-stenting strategy was chosen, with stent deployment at low pressure to respect the distal reference vessel page. Because of the possibility of malapposition of the proximal stent segment and the need to correct the severe lateral branch lesion, postdilation with simultaneous kissing balloon and proximal optimisation techniques were employed.

The main vessel in its proximal segment has a systematically larger diameter than its distal segment at the lateral branch origin, which is more pronounced the greater the diameter of the distal reference vessel is.6 Soon after stent implantation, incomplete strut apposition occurred in the proximal segment, which led to the inadvertent retreat of the guidewire to behind the first stent struts from the lateral branch. Although the guidewire is routinely removed from the lateral branch to the guide catheter interior, the guidewire passage occurred between the vessel wall and the stent proximal segment.

There are two methods to optimise the proximal stent diameter in bifurcations. The first is the proximal optimisation method, in which a hypersized short balloon is insufflated proximal to the carina, thus achieving localised stent expansion, which allows for movement past the lateral vessel more easily. The second method is to use the simultaneous kissing balloon, wherein balloon insufflation will treat the lateral branch lesion simultaneously to achieve complete apposition of the proximal stent struts.7 The technical limitation of this proximal malapposition correction technique is that it increases procedure complexity, thus causing elliptical stent expansion and facilitating the inadvertent guidewire passage behind the stent struts. In addition, the routine use of the final kissing balloon technique has been questioned by the Nordic-Baltic Bifurcation Study III (NORDIC III), where its benefit was demonstrated only in cases of true bifurcation lesion treatment, for the purpose of reducing lateral branch restenosis, and maintaining a rate of major clinical events similar to that of the group who had not undergone the technique.7

In the present case, the lateral branch demonstrated no initial lesion; soon after stent implantation there was plaque displacement with thrombus toward its ostium, which led to simultaneous post-dilation performance.

One way to prevent the occurrence would have been to employ the proximal stent optimisation technique. However, according to Iakovou et al.,8 the main vessel stent should be released at low pressure to avoid damaging the jailed guidewire or deteriorating the lateral branch origin, and the guidewires should be replaced to perform the proximal segment optimisation technique and subsequently use the kissing balloon, if necessary.

The advantages of using IVUS as a guide during bifurcation angioplasty include information on the plaque distribution and composition, determination of the stent diameter and length, evaluation of stem expansion and apposition, and detection of complications such as dissected borders. These factors may influence major clinical outcomes. A study by Kim et al.3 evaluated 758 patients undergoing bifurcation PCI, excluding those of the left main coronary artery, and compared 473 IVUS-guided patients to 285 patients treated without this technique. At the four-year follow-up, patients in the IVUS-guided group had lower mortality and very late thrombosis rates, but there was no effect on target lesion revascularisation.

The use of IVUS in the present case was very important, as it helped detect proximal stent deformation and assess the correct location of the new guidewire for post-dilatation and second stent implantation. Additionally, the final outcome was assessed by IVUS to determine whether there was good expansion and complete stent strut apposition. Although some studies have demonstrated a decreased mortality rate, a decreased stroke rate, and less need for a revascularisation in patients undergoing bifurcation lesion PCIs, it is important to wait for clinical trials that are designed for this purpose, so that the routine IVUS use can be recommended in all bifurcation cases.3,9

New imaging techniques with higher resolution than IVUS are available for atherosclerotic bifurcation disease assessment, such as optical coherence tomography, which could offer greater diagnostic precision of incomplete apposition and late stent thrombosis risk predictors.10 However, there are limitations, such as the low availability at cardiac catheterisation units as well as the associated costs. Another possibility for bifurcation treatment is the use of fractional myocardial flow reserve in the lateral branch functional assessment and intervention requirement. The understanding that the angiographic assessment overestimates jailed vessel severity could decrease lateral branch stenting.11

This case demonstrates an infrequent complication in bifurcation treatment, which reflects a need for the surgeon to recall the anatomical and technical principles of this complex subgroup. This case also highlights a role for IVUS in the diagnosis of equivocal angiographic images and as a guide during complex procedures, in order to ensure good results in the short- and long-term.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

REFERENCES

Received on: 4/2/2012

Accepted on: 07/30/2012

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  • 8. Iakovou I, Ge L, Colombo A. Contemporary stent treatment of coronary bifurcations. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2005;46(8):1446-55.
  • 9. Patel Y, Depta J, Novak E, Yeung M, Lavine K, Banerjee S, et al. Long-term outcomes with use of intravascular ultrasound for the treatment of coronary bifurcation lesions. Am J Cardiol. 2012;109(7):960-5.
  • 10. Ferrante G, Kaplan AV, Di Mario C. Assessment with optical coherence tomography of a new strategy for bifurcation lesion treatment: the Tryton Side-Branch-Stent. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2009;73(1):69-72.
  • 11. Koo BK, Kang HJ, Youn TJ, Chae IH, Choi DJ, Kim HS, et al. Physiological assessment of jailed side branch lesions using fractional flow reserve. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2005;46(4): 633-7.
  • Correspondence to:

    Arturo R. Quizhpe
    Hospital José Carrasco Arteaga
    Rayoloma y Popayan - Cuenca, Ecuador
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      08 Nov 2012
    • Date of issue
      2012

    History

    • Received
      02 Apr 2012
    • Accepted
      30 July 2012
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