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on March 24, 2003

Circulation. 2003
Published online before print March 24, 2003, doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000061953.72662.3A
A more recent version of this article appeared on April 22, 2003
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Right arrow Coronary imaging: angiography/ultrasound/Doppler/CC
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Submitted on October 28, 2002
Revised on January 28, 2003
Accepted on February 3, 2003

Angiographic Assessment of Collateral Connections in Comparison With Invasively Determined Collateral Function in Chronic Coronary Occlusions

Gerald S. Werner MD*, Markus Ferrari MD, Stephan Heinke MD, Friedhelm Kuethe MD, Ralf Surber MD, Barbara M. Richartz MD, and Hans R. Figulla MD

From the Clinic for Internal Medicine III, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Jena, Germany.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: gerald.werner{at}med.uni-jena.de.

Background--The evaluation of new therapeutic modalities to induce collateral growth in coronary artery disease require improved methods of angiographic characterization of collaterals, which should be validated by quantitative assessment of collateral function.

Methods and Results--In 100 patients with total chronic occlusion of a major coronary artery (duration >2 weeks) collaterals were assessed angiographically by the Rentrop grading, by their anatomic location, and by a new grading of collateral connections (CC grade 0: no continuous connection, CC1: threadlike continuous connection, CC2: side branch-like connection). The interobserver variability was 10%. Collateral function was assessed by Doppler flow (average peak velocity) and pressure recordings distal to the occlusion before recanalization. A collateral resistance index (RColl) was calculated. Recruitable collateral flow was measured during a final balloon inflation >30 minutes after the baseline measurement. The comparison of the anatomic location, the Rentrop, and the collateral connection grade showed only for the latter an independent and significant relation with RColl. CC2 collaterals preserved regional left ventricular function better than did CC1 collaterals and provided a higher collateral flow reserve during adenosine infusion. CC0 collaterals were predominantly observed in recent occlusions of 2 to 4 weeks' duration, with the highest RColl. During balloon reocclusion, recruitable collateral function was best preserved with CC2 and least with CC0.

Conclusions--The angiographic grading of collateral connections in total chronic occlusions could differentiate collaterals according to their functional capacity to preserve regional left ventricular function and was closely associated with invasively determined parameters of collateral hemodynamics.


Key words: collateral circulation • angiography • occlusion




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