1. Intravascular ultrasound : a technique in evolution : methodological considerations
- Author
-
Kearney, Peter Patrick
- Subjects
616.1 - Abstract
As the title of the thesis suggests, intravascular ultrasound has been, and continues to be, an imaging technique that is in active evolution. Image quality has improved dramatically from the crude, low resolution 'black and white' images of the first generation of intravascular ultrasound scanners and transducers are now small enough to image most arteries before intervention. Although intravascular ultrasound is increasingly seen as the most informative method of assessing the coronary arteries, there are outstanding problems that must be addressed and overcome before its full potential can be achieved. The aim of this thesis is to examine a number of these methodological shortcomings of intravascular ultrasound so that appropriate solutions can be found. After a general overview, provided in Chapter 1, the reproducibility of intravascular ultrasound quantitation is assessed in Chapter 2. For reasons elaborated above, ultrasound is seen as the best technique to study the acute and long term outcome of coronary interventions and the effect of plaque modifying agents. Without detailed data concerning its reproducibility, such studies are uninterpretable. Chapter 3 deals with the impact of catheter malfunction on the geometric integrity of intravascular ultrasound images. At present, the mechanical ultrasound devices are the most widely used systems. All mechanical systems are potentially subject to the problem of non -uniform rotation of the transducer, and to date its impact has been poorly characterised. The difficulty encountered in discriminating unstable coronary lesions is examined in Chapter 4. There is a widely held view that acute coronary lesions cannot be discriminated using intravascular ultrasound. Specific echographic markers are described that are found in the majority of unstable lesions. Close scrutiny of grey scale images allows identification of acute lesions and may allow discrimination of thrombus from underlying atheromatous plaque. In the last two chapters, methodological issues relating to the clinical application of intravascular ultrasound in guiding coronary stenting are explored. In chapter 5, the findings of an observational study confirm the potential of intravascular ultrasound to provide additional information in cases in which favourable angiographic appearances have been achieved. However, the choice of one particular 'expansion index' over another is seen to impact significantly on the proportion of lesions that are judged to be successful. Before ultrasound guidance based on the attainment of specific quantitative expansion criteria be advocated as a widely applied technique, the reproducibility of reference segment measurements must be known. This issue is studied in chapter 6. Separate studies are described in each of the data chapters. A similar layout is employed in each, consisting of the study aims, methods, findings, discussion and conclusion. At the risk of introducing a degree of repetition in the methods sections of each chapter, the ultrasound examination and image interpretation protocol are elaborated in each case, as important differences exist between the studies.
- Published
- 1995