1. Coronary Artery Perforations in the Contemporary Interventional Era.
- Author
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Kiernan, T. J., Yan, B. P., Ruggiero, N., Eisenberg, J. D., Bernal, J., Cubeddu, R. J., Witzke, C., Don, C., Cruz-Gonzalez, I., Rosenfield, K., Pomersantev, E., and Palacios, I.
- Subjects
CORONARY artery surgery ,SURGICAL complications ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ANGIOGRAPHY ,SURGICAL stents ,ANGIOPLASTY ,ENDARTERECTOMY ,CORONARY artery bypass - Abstract
Background: Coronary perforations represent a serious complication of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of documented coronary perforations at Massachusetts General Hospital from 2000 to 2008. Medical records review and detailed angiographic analysis were performed in all patients. Results: Sixty-eight cases of coronary perforation were identified from a total of 14,281 PCIs from March 2000 to March 2008 representing an overall incidence of 0.48%. The study cohort was predominantly male (61.8%), mean age 71±11 years with 78% representing acute cases (unstable angina: 36.8%, NSTEMI: 30.9%, STEMI: 10.3%). Coronary artery perforation occurred as a complication of wire manipulation in 45 patients (66.2%) with 88.9% of this group being hydrophilic wires, of coronary stenting in 11 (16.2%), of angioplasty alone in 6 (8.8%), and of rotational atherectomy in 8 (11.8%). The perforation was sealed with an angioplasty balloon alone in 16 patients (23.5%), and with stents in 14 patients (20.6%) (covered stents: 11.8% and noncovered stents: 8.8%). Emergency CABG was performed in 2 patients (2.9%). Five patients (7.4%) developed periprocedural MI. The in-hospital mortality rate was 5.9% in the study cohort. Conclusion: Coronary artery perforation as a complication of PCI is still rare as demonstrated in our series with an incidence of 0.48%. The predominant cause of coronary perforations in the current era of PCI is wire injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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