Circulation, Vol 85, 86-92, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
TM Suter, M Buechi, OM Hess, C Haemmerli-Saner, A Gaglione and HP Krayenbuehl
BACKGROUND. Coronary vasomotion was evaluated at rest and during bicycle
exercise in 33 patients (age, 53 +/- 7 years) with coronary artery disease.
In a first group of patients (n = 15), vasomotion was studied before and
4.3 +/- 2.3 months (early) after percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty (PTCA), whereas in a second group (n = 18), exercise coronary
arteriography was performed 30 +/- 11 months (late) after successful PTCA.
Patients with restenosis (percent area stenosis greater than or equal to
75% or percent diameter stenosis greater than or equal to 50%) were
excluded. METHODS AND RESULTS. Luminal areas of a normal segment and the
stenotic segment were determined at rest, during supine bicycle exercise,
and 5 minutes after sublingual nitrate administration by using biplane
quantitative coronary arteriography. Work loads before and early after PTCA
were identical in group 1 and similar late after PTCA in group 2. Percent
area stenosis decreased from 86% to 36% (p less than 0.001) in group 1 and
from 93% to 46% (p less than 0.001) in group 2. Normal coronary arteries
showed mild vasodilation during exercise before (+3%, NS versus rest),
early (+7%, NS versus rest), and late after (+10%, p less than 0.05 versus
rest) PTCA. Administration of sublingual nitrate was associated with
significant vasodilation of the normal vessel segment before (+27%, p less
than 0.001 versus rest), early (+31%, p less than 0.001 versus rest), and
late (+21%, p less than 0.001 versus rest) after PTCA. In contrast, the
stenotic vessel segments showed coronary vasoconstriction during exercise
before PTCA (-25%, p less than 0.001 versus rest), whereas minimal
vasomotion was observed early (+2%; NS versus rest) as well as late (+5%;
NS versus rest) after PTCA. Individual post-PTCA (early and late) exercise
data elicited vasodilation in 19, no vasomotion in four, and
vasoconstriction in 10 instances. Sublingual administration of nitrate was
associated with a significant increase in minimal luminal area before
(+18%, p less than 0.05 versus rest), early (+24%, p less than 0.01 versus
rest), and late (+16%, p less than 0.001 versus rest) after PTCA. An
inverse linear correlation was found between the percent change in minimal
luminal area during peak exercise and percent area stenosis at rest (r =
0.77, p less than 0.001). CONCLUSIONS. Exercise-induced stenosis narrowing
is observed before PTCA but normal vasomotion is reestablished in two
thirds of all patients early and late after PTCA. In one third, an abnormal
reaction to exercise (i.e., vasoconstriction) persisted after PTCA, mainly
in those patients with a residual area stenosis of 50% (percent diameter
stenosis of 30%) or more. Thus, PTCA appears to have a salutary effect on
coronary vasomotion during exercise, which, however, remains dependent on
the severity of the residual stenosis.
ARTICLES
Normalization of coronary vasomotion after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty?
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Zurich, Switzerland.
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