Rethrombosis after reperfusion with streptokinase: importance of geometry of residual lesions.
- 1 May 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 69 (5) , 991-999
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.69.5.991
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that lesion rethrombosis after streptokinase reperfusion is related to luminal size of the residual stenosis. Two independent techniques of analyzing coronary angiograms, quantitative coronary angiography and computer-based videodensitometry, were used to estimate the size of the residual lumen immediately after discontinuation of streptokinase. These techniques were selected because they provide independent estimates of cross-sectional area of a lesion with high degrees of reproducibility and minimal observer variability. Twenty-four patients who had undergone successful reperfusion with streptokinase were studied. Seven patients had lesion rethrombosis documented either on a repeat angiogram, at autopsy, or, in one case, by the fact that the patient had an acute transmural infarction resulting in death. Vessel patency was documented by repeat coronary angiography 8 to 14 days after initial streptokinase reperfusion in the other 17 patients. As assessed by quantitative coronary angiography, seven of 13 patients (54%) with minimal luminal cross-sectional areas of less than 0.4 mm2 had rethrombosis. None of the 11 patients with lumens greater than 0.4 mm2 had rethrombosis. In the 17 patients with vessels that remained patent the size of the residual lesion at repeat catheterization was compared with its size immediately after reperfusion with streptokinase. Over the intervening 8 to 14 day interval, an average percentage increase in minimal cross-sectional area of 116 +/- 34% was observed. In seven patients minimal luminal cross-sectional area more than doubled. Integrated optical density, an index of the severity of coronary stenosis derived from computer-based videodensitometry, was also useful in identifying a subgroup of patients at high risk for rethrombosis of lesion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
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