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[Primary angioplasty in acute coronary syndromes with ST-segment elevation: experience of three Alsacian centers].

Authors :
Hanssen M
Gottwalles Y
Monassier JP
Couppie P
Boulenc J
Jacquemin L
De Poli F
Levai L
El Belghiti R
Source :
Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux [Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss] 2005 Nov; Vol. 98 (11), pp. 1160-5.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology, published in 2003, consider primary angioplasty as the preferred treatment strategy in acute coronary syndromes with ST-segment elevation, if the procedure can be performed within 90 min after first medical contact. We report the experience of three Alsacian centers running a common prospective registry with 2504 consecutive patients enroled between January 1999 and December 2004. The average age of the patients was 62 years with a proportion of 24% women. The time delay "pain to admission" was > or =3 hours in 55.9% of the cases. The treatment delay "door to catheterisation needle" was 59 min and the mean delay "door-to-reperfusion" was 79 min. The study population was representative of the real world including subsets of patients with a particulary high risk profile: age > or =70 years in 33%, a Killip grade > or =3 in 11.5%, rescucitated sudden death in 6.6% and cardiogenic shock in 10.9% of the patients respectively. The immediate procedural success rate (Timi 3 flow) in the treated coronary artery was 96.5%. The overall inhospital mortality-rate was 9.3%. The combinations of rescucitated sudden death--cardiogenic shock or age > or =75 years--cardiogenic shock were associated with a poor clinical outcome and mortality rates of 69% and 72.6% respectively, where as in the absence of abovementioned clinical high risk settings, the mortality rate was as low as 1.4%. The overall bleeding complication rate was 1.4%. The policy of systematic primary angioplasty in acute coronary syndromes with ST-Segment elevation appears to be coherent. The procedural complications and the in-hospital mortality rates were low, except in the presence of above mentioned clinical high risk settings.

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
0003-9683
Volume :
98
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16379115