Influence of coronary collateral blood flow on the development of exertional ischemia and Q wave infarction in patients with severe single-vessel disease.
- 1 April 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 71 (4) , 681-686
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.71.4.681
Abstract
The functional significance of coronary collateral flow from a nonobstructed supply artery was studied in 121 patients with severe (.gtoreq. 80%) single-vessel disease, 64 with and 57 without Q wave infarction. All patients underwent exercise Tl imaging and coronary angiography. On angiography, collateral flow was present in 85% of 74 occluded arteries compared with only 17% of 47 arteries with subtotal obstruction (P < 0.001). Collateral flow was not seen in arteries with lesions of less than 90% obstruction. Collateral flow was present in 100% of 29 occluded arteries in patients without Q wave infarction compared with only 76% of 45 occluded arteries with Q wave infarction (P < 0.005). Clinical variables did not correlate with collateral flow. Collateral flow did not prevent ischemia on exercise Tl imaging in patients without Q wave infarction: 30 of 33 (91%) with collateral flow had reversible Tl defects compared with 24 of 24 (100%) without collateral flow (P = NS). In patients with Q wave infarction, partially reversible exercise Tl defects (peri-infarctional ischemia) were more common with flow to the area from either subtotal obstruction (73%) or collateral flow (45%) than with no flow from total occlusion (27%; P = 0.05). In patients with severe single-vessel disease the presence of collateral flow is principally determined by coronary occlusion. Collateral flow may protect from Q wave infarction but does not prevent exercise ischemia on Tl imaging.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
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