1. Continuous Thermodilution Method to Assess Coronary Flow Reserve
- Author
-
Rafael Vázquez-García, Dolores Cañadas-Pruaño, Josep Gómez-Lara, Etelvino Silva, Alejandro Gutierrez-Barrios, Fernando Alfonso, Fernando Rivero Crespo, Livia L. Gheorghe, Elena Izaga-Torralba, Ricardo Zayas Rueda, Germán Calle-Pérez, and Inmaculada Noval-Morillas
- Subjects
Male ,Cardiac Catheterization ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thermodilution ,Hyperemia ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary disease ,Coronary Angiography ,Proof of Concept Study ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Coronary Circulation ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Saline ,Aged ,Coronary flow ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,Reproducibility of Results ,Coronary flow reserve ,Middle Aged ,Coronary Vessels ,Microvessels ,Cardiology ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Saline Solution ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Clinical risk factor - Abstract
Coronary flow reserve (CFR) is a well-validated flow-based physiological parameter that has shown value in clinical risk stratification. CFR can be invasively assessed, classically by Doppler and, more recently, by thermodilution with saline boluses (CFRthermo-bolus). Alternatively, continuous thermodilution is a novel operator-independent, highly-reproducible technique to invasively quantify maximum absolute coronary flow (AF). This study aimed to assess the feasibility of this method to quantify resting AF and to determine CFR (CFRThermo-infusion) as compared with CFRthermo-bolus. Sixty-two consecutive patients with suspicion of coronary disease and absence of significant epicardial lesions were prospectively investigated. AF at maximal hyperemia (20 mL/min) and at lower infusion rates (6-8-10-12 mL/min) were systematically measured using a dedicated catheter and a temperature/pressure guidewire. The absence of baseline Pd/Pa decrease at 6 (0.15 ± 0.2%), 8 (0.17 ± 0.18%) and 10 mL/min (0.2 ± 0.12%) demonstrated absence of hyperemia at ≤10 mL/min (all p = NS). However, at 12 mL/min hyperemia was confirmed by a significant decrease in Pd/Pa (1.3 ± 1.5%, p
- Published
- 2021