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Postocclusional Hyperemia for Fractional Flow Reserve After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention.

Authors :
Yoshiaki Kawase
Hiroyuki Omori
Masanori Kawasaki
Toru Tanigaki
Tetsuo Hirata
Syuuichi Okamoto
Hideaki Ota
Jun Kikuchi
Munenori Okubo
Hiroki Kamiya
Akihiro Hirakawa
Takahiko Suzuki
Hitoshi Matsuo
Source :
Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions; Dec2017, Vol. 10 Issue 12, p1-6, 6p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

ackground--Postocclusional hyperemia caused by balloon occlusion is a potential alternative method of inducing hyperemia for measuring post-percutaneous coronary intervention fractional flow reserve (FFR). The aim of this study was to investigate postocclusional hyperemia as a method of inducing hyperemia. Methods and Results--FFR measured by postocclusional hyperemia (FFRoccl) caused by balloon occlusion after percutaneous coronary intervention was compared with FFR measured by drug-induced hyperemia (FFR measured by intravenous ATP; and FFR measured by intracoronary papaverine injection [FFRpap]) in 98 lesions from 98 patients. The hyperemia duration was also measured for FFRoccl and FFRpap. The correlation coefficient between FFRoccl, FFR measured by intravenous ATP (r=0.973; P<0.01), and FFRpap (r=0.975; P<0.01) showed almost identical values to those obtained for the correlation coefficient between FFR measured by intravenous ATP and FFRpap (r=0.967; P<0.01). No clear difference was observed on Bland-Altman analysis. Hyperemia duration was significantly longer with FFRoccl than with FFRpap (70±22 versus 51±25 s; P<0.01). Conclusions--Strong correlations were found between FFRoccl and FFR measured by intravenous ATP and FFRoccl and FFRpap. Hyperemia caused by FFRoccl was significantly longer than that caused by FFRpap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19417640
Volume :
10
Issue :
12
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126875848
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.117.005674