1. Simultaneous Dual Vascular Access Site for the Treatment of Coronary Artery Bifurcation Lesions by Complex 2-Stent Technique.
- Author
-
ISAAZ, KARL, MAYAUD, NORBERT, LAMAUD, MICHEL, RAYNAUD, AMÉLIE, CERISIER, ALEXIS, SABRY, MOHAMMED HASSAN, RICHARD, LAURE, KHAMIS, HAZEM, ABD-ALAZIZ, AHMAD, and DA COSTA, ANTOINE
- Subjects
ARTERIAL catheterization ,CORONARY heart disease treatment ,SURGICAL stents ,PRECANCEROUS conditions ,CATHETERS ,OPERATIVE surgery - Abstract
Objectives: To propose an original approach based on simultaneous dual vascular access site (DAS) using 2 small-size guiding catheters to easily perform complex 2-stent techniques for bifurcation coronary lesions (BL). Background: Simultaneous kissing stenting and classic crush technique require large 7 or 8Fr guiding catheters leading to large amounts of contrast medium, vascular access site complications, and sometimes frictions or criss-cross of the 2-stent delivery systems. Methods: DAS was used in 30 patients with BL (11 radio-radial, 16 radio-femoral, and 3 femoro-femoral). Among 60 guiding catheters, the size was 5Fr in 28, 6Fr in 30, and 7Fr in 2 cases of double adjacent BL. When 2 different size catheters were used, contrast medium injections were done using the smallest size catheter. DAS patients were compared with a group of 30 BL patients treated using a single femoral vascular access site (SAS) with 7 or 8Fr catheters. Results: Success rate was 100% in all patients. Contrast volume used was smaller in DAS than in SAS patients (277 ± 156 cc vs. 380 ± 165 cc, P = 0.01). No vascular access site complication occurred in the sub-group of the 11 DAS radio-radial patients. Postintervention hospitalization duration was shorter in DAS than in SAS (1.9 ± 2 vs. 2.8 ± 2 days, P = 0.048). Conclusion: DAS allows to successfully perform complex stenting technique of BL using small-size guiding catheters leading to decreased contrast medium volume, decreased vascular access site complications rates, and shortened hospitalization duration. (J Interven Cardiol 2012;25:439-446) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF