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Discordance between Invasive and Non-Invasive Coronary Angiography

Authors :
Shigetaka Kageyama
Kaoru Tanaka
Shinichiro Masuda
Momoko Kageyama
Scot Garg
Adam Updegrove
Johan De Mey
Mark La Meir
Yoshinobu Onuma
Patrick W. Serruys
Radiology
Medical Imaging
Supporting clinical sciences
Artificial Intelligence supported Modelling in clinical Sciences
Body Composition and Morphology
Clinical sciences
Vascular surgery
Cardio-vascular diseases
Cardiac Surgery
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

A 79-year-old male with chronic coronary syndrome with complex coronary artery disease was included in the first-in-man trial of surgical revascularization guided solely by coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) and fractional flow reserve derived from CCTA (FFRCT). In CCTA analysis, the patient had calcified three-vessel disease, with a global anatomical SYNTAX score of 27. In contrast, in the initial FFRCT, only the ramus intermediate stenosis was physiologically significant, with no other vessels having an FFRCT ≤ 0.80 (functional SYNTAX score of 2). Discordance between the results of the CCTA and FFRCT necessitated an in-depth analysis by using both invasive and non-invasive coronary angiography. Angiography-derived fractional flow reserve (FFR) confirmed that the stenosis in the proximal left anterior descending artery (LAD) was physiologically significant, while it remained functionally negative in the second assessment of FFRCT. Extensive calcification is the most plausible explanation for the underestimation of the stenosis of proximal LAD in CCTA-derived FFR technology.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6dda08a7c690e4781aaf8e3db112794e