Abstract 2667: Aspiration Coronary Thrombectomy for Acute Myocardial Infarction Improves Myocardial Salvage Index. Single Center Randomized Study

Circulation ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 118 (suppl_18) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michal Ciszewski ◽  
Jerzy Pregowski ◽  
Anna Teresinska ◽  
Maciej Karcz ◽  
Witold Ruzyllo

Primary percutaneus intervention (pPCI) is a recommended treatment strategy for acute myocardial infarction with ST segment elevation (STEMI). Adjunctive thrombectomy may add clinical benefits. The aim of our study was to compare the efficacy of aspiration thrombectomy versus standard pPCI for STEMI. The primary endpoint was salvage index assessed by sestamibi SPECT perfusion imaging. Single centre randomized study on aspiration thrombectomy in acute STEMI. 135 patients (88 males, mean age 64,3±12,4 yrs) with first acute STEMI were enrolled between Nov 2004 and Dec 2007. Inclusion criteria were: first anterior or inferior STEMI within 12 hours from pain onset with culprit lesion in left anterior descending (LAD) or right coronary artery (RCA) and TIMI flow ≤ 2. Patients were randomly assigned to thrombectomy with Rescue or Diver device followed by stent implantation (65) vs. standard pPCI with stenting (70 pts). 5 patients initially randomised to thrombectomy were finally treated with standard pPCI. Two SPECT examinations were performed: before and 5– 8 days after reperfusion therapy. Five patients died 3–7 days after the procedure, and in 3 pts second SPECT could not be performed because of patients’ severe condition. Thus two SPECT examinations were performed in 127 patients (63 treated with thrombectomy and 64 in control group). These 127 subject were the basis of the intention to treat analyses. There were 41 pts with anterior STEMI and 86 pts with inferior STEMI. Both treatment groups were similar regarding baseline demographic and clinical variables. Based on the SPECT perfusion imaging results, the final infarct size was assessed and myocardial salvage index (proportion of the myocardium at risk salvaged by reperfusion) was calculated. Baseline myocardium at risk area was 35,0%±2,8% in thrombectomy group vs 35,8%±10,9% in control patients. (p=NS). Myocardial salvage index was larger in patients treated with aspiration thrombectomy (0,33±0,27 vs. 0,20 ± 0,21 p = 0,004). Moreover, final infarct size was significantly smaller in patients treated with thrombectomy: 23,9% ± 13,1 % vs.28,3 % ±9,6% p = 0,005. Our results show that coronary thrombectomy is beneficial as an adjunctive therapy to pPCI in STEMI.

2004 ◽  
Vol 91 (01) ◽  
pp. 141-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga Gorchakova ◽  
Werner Koch ◽  
Julinda Mehilli ◽  
Nicolas von Beckerath ◽  
Markus Schwaiger ◽  
...  

SummaryThe PlA polymorphism of the platelet glycoprotein IIIa gene is associated with altered platelet function and response to antiplatelet drugs. We sought to assess whether the PlA polymorphism influences myocardial salvage achieved by reperfusion therapy in patients with acute myocardial infarction. We analyzed 292 patients enrolled in 2 randomized trials that compared stenting plus abciximab with thrombolysis (alteplase alone or alteplase plus abciximab) in acute myocardial infarction. Patients were genotyped for the PlA polymorphism using polymerase chain reaction with fluorogenic probes. Technetium-99m sestamibi was injected before and 1-2 weeks after reperfusion treatment. The scintigrams enabled the calculation of the initial perfusion defect, final infarct size, and the proportion of initial defect salvaged by reperfusion (salvage index). Clinical follow-up was done up to 18 months after primary treatment. The genotype distribution was as follows: PlA2/A2 in 3.4%, PlA1/A2 in 24.7% and PlA1/A1 in 71.9% of patients. There were no significant differences between PlA2 allele carriers and PlA1/A1 patients in salvage index (0.46±0.50 vs. 0.41±0.43, respectively, P=0.48), final infarct size (16.8±20.8% vs. 18.4±19.1% of left ventricle, respectively, P=0.46) as well as 18-month mortality (8.5% vs.7.1%, respectively, P=0.69). The lack of relationship between PlA2 allele and myocardial salvage was observed for both reperfusion strategies, stenting and thrombolysis. Thus, these findings show that the functional PlA polymorphism of platelet glycoprotein IIIa has no influence on the degree of myocardial salvage achieved by reperfusion therapies in patients with acute myocardial infarction.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
T Nunohiro ◽  
S Kuwasaki ◽  
T Fukushima ◽  
S Furudono ◽  
H Suenaga ◽  
...  

Abstract The involvement of cholesterol crystals (CCs) in plaque progression and destabilization of atherosclerotic plaques has been recently recognized. However, little is known about CCs and myocardial salvage in the Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients. This study aimed to evaluate the association between the existence of CCs at the site of culprit coronary artery and myocardial salvage index (MSI).To investigate, we applied the diagnostic resources of Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT). Methods This study included 53 AMI patients (90% with STEMI) who underwent primary PCI within 24h of onset. 53 STEMI patients underwent magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) of 5th days and 3 months after PCI. Infarct size was measured on delayed-enhancement imaging, and area at risk was quantified on T2-weighted imaging. MSI was calculated as [area at risk − infarct size] × 100/area at risk. 3 months CMR with contrast-enhanced imaging of late gadolinium enhancement-LGE. Patients were divided 2 groups according to the existence of CCs at the site of culprit coronary artery. Results CCs occurs in 26 of 53 (49%). Acute 5th days risk area (13.5±4.1 vs 12.6±4.9, P=0.48) and 3months infarct size (5.3±3.5 vs 7.0±3.2, P=0.066) were not significant between CCs and no CCs group. But salvage index were significantly lower in patients with CCs group (47.7±17.5% vs 60.1±20.2%, P=0.021) Conclusion Salvage index in patients that CCs were found by the OCT analysis, remain low after AMI. This study demonstrates the potential correlation between the myocardial salvage and vulnerable morphological features of culprit lesion to the presence of CCs with AMI patients.


Author(s):  
Christoph Fisser ◽  
Stefan Colling ◽  
Kurt Debl ◽  
Andrea Hetzenecker ◽  
Ulrich Sterz ◽  
...  

Abstract Aims Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) has been linked to impaired reperfusion success after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Whether EAT predicts myocardial damage in the early phase after acute myocardial infarction (MI) is unclear. Therefore, we investigated whether EAT in patients with acute MI is associated with more microvascular obstruction (MVO), greater ST-deviation, larger infarct size and reduced myocardial salvage index (MSI). Methods and results This retrospective analysis of a prospective observational study including patients with acute MI (n = 54) undergoing PCI and 12 healthy matched controls. EAT, infarct size and MSI were analyzed with cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, conducted 3–5 days and 12 weeks after MI. Patients with acute MI showed higher EAT volume than healthy controls (46 [25.;75. percentile: 37;59] vs. 24 [15;29] ml, p < 0.001). The high EAT group (above median) showed significantly more MVO (2.22 [0.00;5.38] vs. 0.0 [0.00;2.18] %, p = 0.004), greater ST-deviation (0.38 [0.22;0.55] vs. 0.15 [0.03;0.20] mV×10−1, p = 0.008), larger infarct size at 12 weeks (23 [17;29] vs. 10 [4;16] %, p < 0.001) and lower MSI (40 [37;54] vs. 66 [49;88] %, p < 0.001) after PCI than the low EAT group. After accounting for demographic characteristics, body-mass index, heart volume, infarct location, TIMI-flow grade as well as apnea–hypopnea index, EAT was associated with infarct size at 12 weeks (B = 0.38 [0.11;0.64], p = 0.006), but not with MSI. Conclusions Patients with acute MI showed higher volume of EAT than healthy individuals. High EAT was linked to more MVO and greater ST-deviation. EAT was associated with infarct size, but not with MSI. Graphic abstract


Author(s):  
Mohamed El Farissi ◽  
Danielle C.J. Keulards ◽  
Jo M. Zelis ◽  
Marcel van ’t Veer ◽  
Frederik M. Zimmermann ◽  
...  

Myocardial reperfusion injury—triggered by an inevitable inflammatory response after reperfusion—may undo a considerable part of the myocardial salvage achieved through timely percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Because infarct size is strongly correlated to mortality and risk of heart failure, the importance of endeavors for cardioprotective therapies to attenuate myocardial reperfusion injury and decrease infarct size remains undisputed. Myocardial reperfusion injury is the result of several complex nonlinear phenomena, and for a therapy to be effective, it should act on multiple targets involved in this injury. In this regard, hypothermia remains a promising treatment despite a number of negative randomized controlled trials in humans with acute myocardial infarction so far. To turn the tide for hypothermia in patients with acute myocardial infarction, sophisticated solutions for important limitations of systemic hypothermia should continue to be developed. In this review, we provide a comprehensive overview of the pathophysiology and clinical expression of myocardial reperfusion injury and discuss the current status and possible future of hypothermia for cardioprotection in patients with acute myocardial infarction.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Wamil ◽  
A Borlotti ◽  
A Banerjee ◽  
L Gaughran ◽  
G L De Maria ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Diabetes mellitus (DM) significantly increases mortality following myocardial infarction (MI). The underlying mechanism explaining this adverse prognosis is not completely understood. Purpose This study sought to investigate the characteristics of myocardial healing after MI in DM patients. Methods 62 recruited ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients (21 with DM and 41 controls) underwent acute (1–3 days post-STEMI) and 6 months (6M) follow-up cardiac magnetic resonance scans (CMR). Control cases were matched for the peak troponin levels and area at risk on the acute CMR scans. Blood samples were obtained 6, 24, 48 hours and 6 months after STEMI. Results Despite similar severity of the initial ischaemic injury, DM patients had lower myocardial salvage index (MSI) and as a result larger final infarct size at 6 months. Further segment-based analysis of the acute CMR scans showed significantly prolonged T1-mapping values in all segments including non-ischaemic myocardium in DM patients and poorer recovery of the late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) of the infarcted segments in that group. Additionally, DM patients had higher monocyte counts 24 hours post-MI (1.2±0.4x109/μl DM vs 0.88±0.3 x109/μl control, p=0.001). We found that HbA1C correlated with monocyte count measured 24 hours after STEMI (r=0.577, p=0.006, n=21). HbA1C also predicted myocardial salvage index (MSI) at 6M post STEMI in the DM patients (r=0.891, p=0.017, n=13). Conclusions DM patients presenting with STEMI have increased peripheral blood monocytosis and larger final infarct size compared with STEMI patients without DM. Poorly controlled DM predisposes to adverse cardiac remodelling after STEMI. Acknowledgement/Funding OHSRC Research Grant, National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), British Heart Foundation Centre of Excellence Oxford


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