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Cardiac Catherization Laboratory, Washington Hospital Center, Washington, D.C. 20010.
Preintervention intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging was performed in 313 target lesions in 301 patients. Revascularization strategy intended before imaging was compared with the treatment actually performed; there was a change in therapy in 124 lesions (40%) in 121 patients (40%). This included: (1) assessment of lesion severity leading to revascularization when none had been planned (n = 20, 6%), (2) avoiding surgery or catheter-based revascularization that had originally been planned (n = 21, 7%), and (3) assessment of lesion composition leading to a change in revascularization strategy (n = 20, 6%) or for selecting the revascularization strategy (n = 63, 20%). Nine of these 121 patients were referred for coronary artery bypass graft surgery. IVUS minimal lumen diameter correlated well with angiography (r = 0.83); however, a disagreement was the reason for deciding to perform or not to perform revascularization in 41 lesions (13%). IVUS assessment of target lesion calcification, eccentricity and unusual morphology were the reasons for changing or selecting specific devices: (1) concentric and eccentric lesions with significant superficial calcium were treated with rotational atherectomy, excimer laser angioplasty or surgery; (2) eccentric lesions that did not contain significant superficial calcium were treated with directional atherectomy; (3) dissections and true aneurysms were treated with stent placement even if calcified; (4) thrombus-containing lesions in vein grafts were treated with thrombolytic therapy or extraction atherectomy, or both; and (5) fibrotic vein graft lesions were treated with balloon angioplasty or stent placement.
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