Circulation, Vol 84, 739-754, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
JM Isner, K Rosenfield, DW Losordo, L Rose, RE Langevin Jr, S Razvi and BD Kosowsky
BACKGROUND. We investigated the hypothesis that an ultrasound transducer
positioned within an angioplasty balloon could be used to perform
quantitative assessment of arterial dimensions before and after
percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) and to identify certain
mechanical alterations consequent to PTA, including vascular wall recoil
and the initiation of plaque fractures. METHODS AND RESULTS. A combination
balloon-ultrasound imaging catheter (BUIC) that houses a 20- MHz ultrasound
transducer within and halfway between the proximal and distal ends of an
angioplasty balloon was used to perform PTA in 10 patients with peripheral
vascular disease. Each PTA site was also evaluated before and after PTA by
standard (nonballoon) intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) technique. In eight
patients in whom satisfactory images were recorded with the BUIC before
PTA, luminal cross-sectional area (XSA) of stenotic sites (0.10 +/- 0.01
cm2) did not differ significantly from measurements of XSA by IVUS (0.09
+/- 0.01 cm2, p = NS). Likewise, minimum luminal diameter (Dmin) measured
by BUIC (0.34 +/- 0.02 cm) was similar to that measured by IVUS (0.33 +/-
0.01 cm, p = NS). In nine patients in whom satisfactory images were
recorded with the BUIC after PTA, XSA measured by BUIC (0.29 +/- 0.03 cm2)
did not differ significantly from XSA measured by IVUS (0.30 +/- 0.03 cm2,
p = NS). Dmin measured by BUIC after PTA (0.57 +/- 0.02 cm) was also
similar to Dmin measured by IVUS (0.57 +/- 0.03 cm, p = NS). After PTA, XSA
and Dmin measured immediately after deflation were significantly less than
balloon XSA and diameter at full inflation, indicating significant elastic
recoil of the dilated site. For the nine patients in whom post-PTA images
were satisfactory for quantitative analysis, including four patients in
whom recoil was 39%, 46%, 50%, and 61%, percent recoil measured 28.6 +/-
7.2%. Finally, plaque fractures were identified on-line in six of 10
patients (60%); in each case, initiation of plaque fracture was observed at
inflation pressures of 2 atm or less. CONCLUSIONS. The results of this
preliminary human investigation indicate that an ultrasound transducer
positioned within an angioplasty balloon can be used to perform
quantitative and qualitative analyses of lumen-plaque-wall alterations
immediately preceding, during, and immediately after PTA in patients with
peripheral vascular disease.
ARTICLES
Combination balloon-ultrasound imaging catheter for percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. Validation of imaging, analysis of recoil, and identification of plaque fracture
Department of Medicine (Cardiology), St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Boston, MA 02135.
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