Perforation thresholds and safety factors in in vivo coronary laser angioplasty.
Open Access
- 1 April 1988
- Vol. 59 (4) , 429-437
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.59.4.429
Abstract
Laser angioplasty can cause early (acute perforation) or late (stenosis or aneurysm) complications. To find how much intravascular laser energy can be delivered via a 100 microns core optical fibre passed down a balloon angioplasty catheter without causing angiographic abnormalities up to 10 days later, argon laser energy was delivered percutaneously under radiographic screening to the coronary circulation of 12 normal closed chest dogs. With the balloon inflated, sequential laser pulses were delivered to the same site. Angiograms were recorded before, immediately, and again at one week, after laser delivery. There were two laser-induced perforations (both fatal). Mechanical perforation with the 100 microns fibre occurred four times, but there were no haemodynamic sequelae. To find the acute perforation threshold of similar sized arteries to energy delivered via the bare 100 microns core fibre, the tip of which was held in contact with the luminal surface, 32 argon laser pulses were delivered transluminally in vivo to separate sites in normal rabbit iliac and canine coronary arteries. The acute perforation threshold with energy delivered via the angioplasty catheter lay between 6 and 10 J and that without the balloon angioplasty catheter lay between 3 and 4 J. After delivery of up to 6 J via a balloon angioplasty catheter, there were no angiographic abnormalities at one week. Fibre optic transluminal delivery of laser energy may improve the primary success rate of, and perhaps widen the indications for, coronary angioplasty.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Excimer laser angioplasty: Quantitative comparison in vitro of three ultraviolet wavelengths on tissue ablation and haemolysisLasers in Medical Science, 1986
- Transluminal laser irradiation of coronary arteries in live dogs: An angiographic and morphologic study of acute effectsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1986
- Effect of hematoporphyrin derivative and photodynamic therapy on atherosclerotic rabbitsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1985
- Reduction of laser-induced pathologic tissue injury using pulsed energy deliveryThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1985
- Laser recanalization of occluded atherosclerotic arteries in vivo and in vitro.Circulation, 1985
- Potential complications of coronary laser angioplastyAmerican Heart Journal, 1984
- Complex coronary angioplasty: Multiple coronary dilatationsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1984
- Restenosis after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA): A report from the PTCA registry of the national heart, lung, and blood instituteThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1984
- A controlled trial of propafenone for treatment of frequent and repetitive ventricular premature complexesThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1983
- Nonoperative Dilatation of Coronary-Artery StenosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1979