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Clinical Trial
. 1997 Oct;30(4):888-93.
doi: 10.1016/s0735-1097(97)00239-8.

Angioscopic evaluation of rotational atherectomy followed by additional balloon angioplasty versus balloon angioplasty alone in coronary artery disease: a prospective, randomized study

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Free article
Clinical Trial

Angioscopic evaluation of rotational atherectomy followed by additional balloon angioplasty versus balloon angioplasty alone in coronary artery disease: a prospective, randomized study

H Eltchaninoff et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1997 Oct.
Free article

Abstract

Objectives: This study sought to compare, by angioscopy, the morphologic changes induced by rotational atherectomy, followed by additional angioplasty, with those observed after balloon angioplasty alone.

Background: Rotational atherectomy and balloon angioplasty act by different mechanisms, which could explain the difference in morphologic changes induced by these two techniques.

Methods: The study group included 50 patients with 50 lesions who were randomly assigned to undergo rotational atherectomy (n = 24) or balloon angioplasty (n = 26). Rotational atherectomy with a single burr (approximately equal to 70% of coronary diameter) was systematically followed by additional balloon angioplasty. Angioscopy was performed immediately after the procedure. Abnormal angioscopic findings were 1) flaps, graded from 1 to 3 (1 = intimal flap; 2 = flap protruding into < 50% of the lumen; 3 = flap protruding into > or = 50% of the lumen); 2) thrombi, graded from 1 to 3 (1 = flat deposits; 2 = protruding but nonocclusive thrombus; 3 = occlusive thrombus); 3) subintimal hemorrhage; 4) longitudinal dissection. The two groups were comparable for clinical and angiographic baseline data.

Results: On angioscopy, flaps were observed less frequently after rotational atherectomy followed by additional balloon angioplasty (8 [33%] of 24 lesions) than after balloon angioplasty alone (14 [54%] of 26 lesions, p = 0.08) and were also less severe (grade 1 in 6 lesions, grade 2 in 2 and grade 3 in none vs. grade 1 in 4 lesions, grade 2 in 5 and grade 3 in 5). Longitudinal dissections were also significantly less frequent: one versus six (p = 0.05). There was no difference in the incidence of angioscopic thrombi (p = 0.16) or subintimal hemorrhage (p = 0.15), but the power to detect a significant difference was low for these variables (37% and 26%, respectively).

Conclusions: Rotational atherectomy followed by additional balloon angioplasty leads to fewer angioscopic dissections and a trend toward fewer intimal flaps than balloon angioplasty alone. However, our angioscopic differences did not lead to an outcome difference between the two groups.

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