26 results on '"Christopher M. Cook"'
Search Results
2. Immediate impact of coronary artery bypass graft surgery on regional myocardial perfusion: Results from the Collaborative Pilot Study to Determine the Correlation Between Intraoperative Observations Using Spy Near-Infrared Imaging and Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Physiological Assessment of Lesion SeverityCentral MessagePerspective Statement
- Author
-
Ashesh N. Buch, MBChB, MD, Hazaim Alwair, MBBS, MD, Christopher M. Cook, MBChB, PhD, Ricardo Petraco, MBBS, PhD, Jimmy T. Efird, PhD, MSc, Christopher P. Gregory, MD, Arjun K. Chagarlamudi, MD, Justin E. Davies, MBChB, PhD, Tim P. van de Hoef, MD, PhD, and T. Bruce Ferguson, Jr., MD
- Subjects
myocardial perfusion ,coronary physiology ,bypass grafting ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Objectives: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is performed using anatomic guidance. Data connecting the physiologic significance of the coronary vessel stenosis to the acute physiologic response to grafting are lacking. The Collaborative Pilot Study to Determine the Correlation Between Intraoperative Observations Using Spy Near-Infrared Imaging and Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Physiological Assessment of Lesion Severity study is the first to compare preintervention coronary physiology with the acute regional myocardial perfusion change (RMP-QC) at CABG in a per-graft analysis. Methods: Non-emergent patients undergoing diagnostic catheterization suitable for multivessel CABG were enrolled. Synergy between Percutaneous Coronary Intervention with Taxus score, fractional flow reserve (FFR), instantaneous wave free ratio (iFR), and quantitative coronary angiography was documented in 75 epicardial coronary arteries, with 62 angiographically intermediate and 13 severe stenoses. At CABG, near-infrared fluorescence analysis quantified the relative change (post- vs pregrafting, termed RMP-QC) in the grafted vessel's perfusion territory. Scatter plots were constructed for RMP-QC versus quantitative coronary angiography and RMP-QC versus FFR/iFR. Exact quadrant randomization test for randomness was used. Results: There was no relationship between RMP-QC and quantitative coronary angiography percent diameter stenosis, whether all study vessels were included (P = .949) or vessels with core-lab quantitative coronary angiography only (P = .922). A significant nonrandom association between RMP-QC and FFR (P = .025), as well as between RMP-QC and iFR (P = .008), was documented. These associations remained when excluding vessels with assigned FFR and iFR values (P = .0092 and P = .0006 for FFR and iFR, respectively). Conclusions: The Collaborative Pilot Study to Determine the Correlation Between Intraoperative Observations Using Spy Near-Infrared Imaging and Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Physiological Assessment of Lesion Severity study demonstrates there is no association between angiographic coronary stenosis severity and the acute perfusion change after grafting; there is an association between functional stenosis severity and absolute increase in regional myocardial perfusion after CABG.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The challenges of a randomised placebo-controlled trial of CTO PCI vs. placebo with optimal medical therapy: The ORBITA-CTO pilot study design and protocol
- Author
-
Sarosh Khan, Samer Fawaz, Rupert Simpson, Craig Robertson, Paul Kelly, Shah Mohdnazri, Kare Tang, Christopher M. Cook, Sean Gallagher, Peter O’Kane, James Spratt, Emmanouil S. Brilakis, Grigoris V. Karamasis, Rasha Al-Lamee, Thomas R. Keeble, and John R. Davies
- Subjects
chronic total occlusion (CTO) ,percutaneous coronary intervention (CTO) ,chronic coronary artery disease ,chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) ,stable angina ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundPercutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for coronary chronic total occlusion (CTO) has been performed for the improvement of symptoms and quality of life in patients with stable angina. The ORBITA study demonstrated the role of the placebo effect in contemporary PCI in non-CTO chronic coronary syndromes. However, the benefit of CTO PCI beyond that of a placebo has not been demonstrated.AimsThe ORBITA-CTO pilot study will be a double-blind, placebo-controlled study of CTO PCI randomising patients who have: (1) been accepted by a CTO operator for PCI; (2) experienced symptoms due to a CTO; (3) evidence of ischaemia; (4) evidence of viability within the CTO territory; and (5) a J-CTO score ≤3.MethodsPatients will undergo medication optimisation that will ensure they are on at least a minimum amount of anti-anginals and complete questionnaires. Patients will record their symptoms on an app daily throughout the study. Patients will undergo randomisation procedures, including an overnight stay, and be discharged the following day. All anti-anginals will be stopped after randomisation and re-initiated on a patient-led basis during the 6-month follow-up period. At follow-up, patients will undergo repeat questionnaires and unblinding, with a further 2-week unblinded follow-up.ResultsThe co-primary outcomes are feasibility (blinding) in this cohort and angina symptom score using an ordinal clinical outcome scale for angina. Secondary outcomes include changes in quality-of-life measures, Seattle Angina Questionnaire (SAQ), peak VO2, and anaerobic threshold on the cardiopulmonary exercise test.ConclusionThe feasibility of a placebo-controlled CTO PCI study will lead to future studies assessing efficacy. The impact of CTO PCI on angina measured using a novel daily symptom app may provide improved fidelity in assessing symptoms in patients with CTO's.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessing the Impact of Prolonged Averaging of Coronary Continuous Thermodilution Traces
- Author
-
Samer Fawaz, Daniel Munhoz, Thabo Mahendiran, Emanuele Gallinoro, Takuya Mizukami, Sarosh A. Khan, Rupert F. G. Simpson, Johan Svanerud, Christopher M. Cook, John R. Davies, Grigoris V. Karamasis, Bernard De Bruyne, and Thomas R. Keeble
- Subjects
coronary ,CMD ,continuous thermodilution ,microvascular ,Coroflow ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Continuous Thermodilution is a novel method of quantifying coronary flow (Q) in mL/min. To account for variability of Q within the cardiac cycle, the trace is smoothened with a 2 s moving average filter. This can sometimes be ineffective due to significant heart rate variability, ventricular extrasystoles, and deep inspiration, resulting in a fluctuating temperature trace and ambiguity in the location of the “steady state”. This study aims to assess whether a longer moving average filter would smoothen any fluctuations within the continuous thermodilution traces resulting in improved interpretability and reproducibility on a test–retest basis. Patients with ANOCA underwent repeat continuous thermodilution measurements. Analysis of traces were performed at averages of 10, 15, and 20 s to determine the maximum acceptable average. The maximum acceptable average was subsequently applied as a moving average filter and the traces were re-analysed to assess the practical consequences of a longer moving average. Reproducibility was then assessed and compared to a 2 s moving average. Of the averages tested, only 10 s met the criteria for acceptance. When the data was reanalysed with a 10 s moving average filter, there was no significant improvement in reproducibility, however, it resulted in a 12% diagnostic mismatch. Applying a longer moving average filter to continuous thermodilution data does not improve reproducibility. Furthermore, it results in a loss of fidelity on the traces, and a 12% diagnostic mismatch. Overall, current practice should be maintained.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Complete Revascularization by Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for Patients With ST‐Segment–Elevation Myocardial Infarction and Multivessel Coronary Artery Disease: An Updated Meta‐Analysis of Randomized Trials
- Author
-
Yousif Ahmad, James P. Howard, Ahran Arnold, Megha Prasad, Henry Seligman, Christopher M. Cook, Takayuki Warisawa, Matthew Shun‐Shun, Ziad Ali, Manish A. Parikh, Rasha Al‐Lamee, Sayan Sen, Darrel Francis, Jeffrey W. Moses, Martin B. Leon, Gregg W. Stone, and Dimitri Karmpaliotis
- Subjects
percutaneous coronary intervention ,revascularization ,ST‐segment–elevation myocardial infarction ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background For patients with ST‐segment–elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and multivessel coronary artery disease, the optimal treatment of the non‐infarct‐related artery has been controversial. This up‐to‐date meta‐analysis focusing on individual clinical end points was performed to further evaluate the benefit of complete revascularization with percutaneous coronary intervention for patients with STEMI and multivessel coronary artery disease. Methods and Results We systematically identified all randomized trials comparing complete revascularization with percutaneous coronary intervention to culprit‐only revascularization for multivessel disease in STEMI and performed a random‐effects meta‐analysis. The primary efficacy end point was cardiovascular death analyzed on an intention‐to‐treat basis. Secondary end points included all‐cause mortality, myocardial infarction, and unplanned revascularization. Ten studies (7542 patients) were included: 3664 patients were randomized to complete revascularization and 3878 to culprit‐only revascularization. Across all patients, complete revascularization was superior to culprit‐only revascularization for reduction in the risk of cardiovascular death (relative risk [RR], 0.68; 95% CI, 0.47–0.98; P=0.037; I2=21.8%) and reduction in the risk of myocardial infarction (RR, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.54–0.79; P
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Fractional Flow Reserve in Angiographically Insignificant Stenoses: Unmasking the Lesion or Creating Disease?
- Author
-
Christopher M. Cook and Justin E. Davies
- Subjects
Editorials ,coronary flow ,coronary physiology ,fractional flow reserve ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Invasive Detection of Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction: How It Began, and Where We Are Now
- Author
-
Samer Fawaz, Sarosh Khan, Rupert Simpson, Gerald Clesham, Christopher M Cook, John R Davies, Grigoris Karamasis, and Thomas R Keeble
- Subjects
Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
The landscape of interventional cardiology is ever evolving. Contemporary practice has shifted from a stenosis-centred approach to the total characterisation of both the epicardial and microcirculatory vessels. Microcirculatory dysfunction plays an important role in the pathophysiology of acute and chronic coronary syndromes, and characterisation of the microcirculation has important clinical consequences. Accordingly, the invasive diagnosis of microcirculatory dysfunction is becoming a key feature of the interventional cardiologist’s toolkit. This review focuses on the methodology underpinning the invasive diagnosis of microvascular dysfunction and highlights the indices that have arisen from these methodologies.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Development of artificial intelligence tools for invasive Doppler-based coronary microvascular assessment
- Author
-
Henry Seligman, Sapna B Patel, Anissa Alloula, James P Howard, Christopher M Cook, Yousif Ahmad, Guus A de Waard, Mauro Echavarría Pinto, Tim P van de Hoef, Haseeb Rahman, Mihir A Kelshiker, Christopher A Rajkumar, Michael Foley, Alexandra N Nowbar, Samay Mehta, Mathieu Toulemonde, Meng-Xing Tang, Rasha Al-Lamee, Sayan Sen, Graham Cole, Sukhjinder Nijjer, Javier Escaned, Niels Van Royen, Darrel P Francis, Matthew J Shun-Shin, and Ricardo Petraco
- Subjects
General Engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Aims Coronary flow reserve (CFR) assessment has proven clinical utility, but Doppler-based methods are sensitive to noise and operator bias, limiting their clinical applicability. The objective of the study is to expand the adoption of invasive Doppler CFR, through the development of artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms to automatically quantify coronary Doppler quality and track flow velocity. Methods and results A neural network was trained on images extracted from coronary Doppler flow recordings to score signal quality and derive values for coronary flow velocity and CFR. The outputs were independently validated against expert consensus. Artificial intelligence successfully quantified Doppler signal quality, with high agreement with expert consensus (Spearman’s rho: 0.94), and within individual experts. Artificial intelligence automatically tracked flow velocity with superior numerical agreement against experts, when compared with the current console algorithm [AI flow vs. expert flow bias −1.68 cm/s, 95% confidence interval (CI) −2.13 to −1.23 cm/s, P < 0.001 with limits of agreement (LOA) −4.03 to 0.68 cm/s; console flow vs. expert flow bias −2.63 cm/s, 95% CI −3.74 to −1.52, P < 0.001, 95% LOA −8.45 to −3.19 cm/s]. Artificial intelligence yielded more precise CFR values [median absolute difference (MAD) against expert CFR: 4.0% for AI and 7.4% for console]. Artificial intelligence tracked lower-quality Doppler signals with lower variability (MAD against expert CFR 8.3% for AI and 16.7% for console). Conclusion An AI-based system, trained by experts and independently validated, could assign a quality score to Doppler traces and derive coronary flow velocity and CFR. By making Doppler CFR more automated, precise, and operator-independent, AI could expand the clinical applicability of coronary microvascular assessment.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Physiology-guided PCI versus CABG for left main coronary artery disease: insights from the DEFINE-LM registry
- Author
-
Takayuki Warisawa, Christopher M. Cook, Yoshiaki Kawase, James P. Howard, Yousif Ahmad, Henry Seligman, Christopher Rajkumar, Takumi Toya, Shunichi Doi, Akihiro Nakajima, Toru Tanigaki, Hiroyuki Omori, Masafumi Nakayama, Rafael Vera-Urquiza, Sonoka Yuasa, Takao Sato, Yuetsu Kikuta, Hidetaka Nishina, Rasha Al-Lamee, Sayan Sen, Amir Lerman, Yoshihiro J. Akashi, Javier Escaned, Hitoshi Matsuo, and Justin E. Davies
- Subjects
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
There have been no studies comparing clinical outcomes of physiology-guided revascularization in patients with unprotected left main coronary disease (ULMD) between percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) vs. coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). The aim of this study was to assess the long-term clinical outcomes between PCI and CABG of patients with physiologically significant ULMD. From an international multicenter registry of ULMD patients interrogated with instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR), we analyzed data from 151 patients (85 PCI vs. 66 CABG) who underwent revascularization according to the cutoff value of iFR ≤ 0.89. Propensity score matching was employed to adjust for baseline clinical characteristics. The primary endpoint was a composite of all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization. The secondary endpoints were the individual components of the primary endpoint. Mean age was 66.6 (± 9.2) years, 79.2% male. Mean SYNTAX score was 22.6 (± 8.4) and median iFR was 0.83 (IQR 0.74–0.87). After performing propensity score matching analysis, 48 patients treated with CABG were matched to those who underwent PCI. At a median follow-up period of 2.8 years, the primary endpoint occurred in 8.3% in PCI group and 20.8% in CABG group, respectively (HR 3.80; 95% CI 1.04–13.9; p = 0.043). There was no difference in each component of the primary event (p > 0.05 for all). Within the present study, iFR-guided PCI was associated with lower cardiovascular events rate in patients with ULMD and intermediate SYNTAX score, as compared to CABG. Graphical abstract State-of-the-art PCI vs. CABG for ULMD. Study design and primary endpoint in patients with physiologically significant ULMD. MACE was defined as the composite of all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and target lesion revascularization. The blue line denotes the PCI arm, and the red line denotes the CABG arm. PCI was associated with significantly lower risk of MACE than CABG. CABG: coronary artery bypass grafting; iFR: instantaneous wave-free ratio; MACE: major adverse cardiovascular events; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; ULMD: unprotected left main coronary artery disease.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Transcatheter versus surgical aortic valve replacement in lower-risk and higher-risk patients: a meta-analysis of randomized trials
- Author
-
Yousif Ahmad, James P Howard, Ahran D Arnold, Mahesh V Madhavan, Christopher M Cook, Maria Alu, Michael J Mack, Michael J Reardon, Vinod H Thourani, Samir Kapadia, Hans Gustav Hørsted Thyregod, Lars Sondergaard, Troels Højsgaard Jørgensen, William D Toff, Nicolas M Van Mieghem, Raj R Makkar, John K Forrest, Martin B Leon, and Cardiology
- Subjects
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
AimsAdditional randomized clinical trial (RCT) data comparing transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) with surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) is available, including longer term follow-up. A meta-analysis comparing TAVI to SAVR was performed. A pragmatic risk classification was applied, partitioning lower-risk and higher-risk patients.Methods and resultsThe main endpoints were death, strokes, and the composite of death or disabling stroke, occurring at 1 year (early) or after 1 year (later). A random-effects meta-analysis was performed. Eight RCTs with 8698 patients were included. In lower-risk patients, at 1 year, the risk of death was lower after TAVI compared with SAVR [relative risk (RR) 0.67; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.47 to 0.96, P = 0.031], as was death or disabling stroke (RR 0.68; 95% CI 0.50 to 0.92, P = 0.014). There were no differences in strokes. After 1 year, in lower-risk patients, there were no significant differences in all main outcomes. In higher-risk patients, there were no significant differences in main outcomes. New-onset atrial fibrillation, major bleeding, and acute kidney injury occurred less after TAVI; new pacemakers, vascular complications, and paravalvular leak occurred more after TAVI.ConclusionIn lower-risk patients, there was an early mortality reduction with TAVI, but no differences after later follow-up. There was also an early reduction in the composite of death or disabling stroke, with no difference at later follow-up. There were no significant differences for higher-risk patients. Informed therapy decisions may be more dependent on the temporality of events or secondary endpoints than the long-term occurrence of main clinical outcomes.
- Published
- 2023
11. Understanding the Basis for Hyperemic and Nonhyperemic Coronary Pressure Assessment
- Author
-
Samer Fawaz and Christopher M. Cook
- Subjects
Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,Cardiac Catheterization ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Coronary Stenosis ,Humans ,Hyperemia ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Vessels ,Severity of Illness Index - Abstract
Despite the now routine integration of invasive physiologic systems into coronary catheter laboratories worldwide, it remains critical that all operators maintain a sound understanding of the fundamental physiologic basis for coronary pressure assessment. More specifically, performing operators should be well informed regarding the basis for hyperemic (ie, fractional flow reserve) and nonhyperemic (ie, instantaneous wave-free ratio and other nonhyperemic pressure ratio) coronary pressure assessment. In this article, we provide readers a comprehensive history charting the inception, development, and validation of hyperemic and nonhyperemic coronary pressure assessment.
- Published
- 2022
12. Noncoronary Gated Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Computed Tomography Scans Can Safely Replace Invasive Coronary Angiography Pre-Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
- Author
-
Sarosh Khan, Swamy Gedela, Olivia M.T. Frost, Michael Galinato, Iveta Crawford, Sheila Smith, Samer Fawaz, Rupert Simpson, Arvind Singh, Grigoris V. Karamasis, Thomas R. Keeble, John R. Davies, Rajesh Aggarwal, Rohan Jagathesan, and Christopher M. Cook
- Subjects
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Artificial Intelligence for Aortic Pressure Waveform Analysis During Coronary Angiography
- Author
-
Ibrahim Danad, Jan J. Piek, Mauro Echavarria-Pinto, Rasha Al-Lamee, Martijn Meuwissen, Darrel P. Francis, Guus A. de Waard, Christopher M. Cook, Javier Escaned, Ricardo Petraco, Sukhjinder Nijjer, Matthias Götberg, James P. Howard, Tim P. van de Hoef, Martijn A. van Lavieren, Justin E. Davies, Paul Knaapen, Henry Seligman, Niels van Royen, and Sayan Sen
- Subjects
Artificial neural network ,business.industry ,Human error ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Convolutional neural network ,Confidence interval ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,Identification (information) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Aortic pressure ,Medicine ,Waveform ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Artificial intelligence ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,computer - Abstract
Objectives: This study developed a neural network to perform automated pressure waveform analysis and allow real-time accurate identification of damping. Background: Damping of aortic pressure during coronary angiography must be identified to avoid serious complications and make accurate coronary physiology measurements. There are currently no automated methods to do this, and so identification of damping requires constant monitoring, which is prone to human error. Methods: The neural network was trained and tested versus core laboratory expert opinions derived from 2 separate datasets. A total of 5,709 aortic pressure waveforms of individual heart beats were extracted and classified. The study developed a recurrent convolutional neural network to classify beats as either normal, showing damping, or artifactual. Accuracies were reported using the opinions of 2 independent core laboratories. Results: The neural network was 99.4% accurate (95% confidence interval: 98.8% to 99.6%) at classifying beats from the testing dataset when judged against the opinions of the internal core laboratory. It was 98.7% accurate (95% confidence interval: 98.0% to 99.2%) when judged against the opinions of an external core laboratory not involved in neural network training. The neural network was 100% sensitive, with no beats classified as damped misclassified, with a specificity of 99.8%. The positive predictive and negative predictive values were 98.1% and 99.5%. The 2 core laboratories agreed more closely with the neural network than with each other. Conclusions: Arterial waveform analysis using neural networks allows rapid and accurate identification of damping. This demonstrates how machine learning can assist with patient safety and the quality control of procedures.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Safety of Revascularization Deferral of Left Main Stenosis Based on Instantaneous Wave-Free Ratio Evaluation
- Author
-
Rasha Al-Lamee, James P. Howard, Yousif Ahmad, Rafael Vera-Urquiza, Henry Seligman, Amir Lerman, Masafumi Nakayama, Justin E. Davies, Takayuki Warisawa, Hidetaka Nishina, Yuetsu Kikuta, Takao Sato, Stephanie El Hajj, Sunao Nakamura, Akihiro Nakajima, Sayan Sen, Shunichi Doi, Christopher M. Cook, Ricardo Petraco, Yoshihiro J. Akashi, Sukhjinder Nijjer, Christopher Rajkumar, Sonoka Goto, Javier Escaned, Darrel P. Francis, Hitoshi Matsuo, and Yoshiaki Kawase
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Revascularization ,Risk Assessment ,Time-to-Treatment ,Coronary artery disease ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Japan ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Instantaneous wave-free ratio ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Coronary Stenosis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,United States ,Europe ,Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,Stenosis ,Treatment Outcome ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objectives The aim of this study was to assess the long-term clinical outcomes of patients with left main coronary artery (LM) stenosis in whom treatment strategy was based on the instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR). Background The overall safety of iFR to guide revascularization decision making in patients with stable coronary artery disease has been established. However, no study has examined the safety of deferral of revascularization of LM disease on the basis of iFR. Methods This multicenter observational study included 314 patients in whom LM stenosis was deferred (n = 163 [51.9%]) or revascularized (n = 151 [48.1%]) according to the iFR cutoff ≤0.89. The primary endpoint was a composite of all-cause death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization. The secondary endpoints were each individual component of the primary endpoint and also cardiac death. Results At a median follow-up period of 30 months, the primary endpoint occurred in 15 patients (9.2%) in the deferred group and 22 patients (14.6%) in the revascularized group (hazard ratio: 1.45; 95% confidence interval: 0.75 to 2.81; p = 0.26), indicating no evidence of a significant difference between the 2 groups. For the secondary endpoints, findings in the iFR-based deferral and revascularization groups were as follows: all-cause death, 3.7% versus 4.6%; cardiac death, 1.2% versus 2.0%; nonfatal myocardial infarction, 2.5% versus 5.3%; and target lesion revascularization, 4.3% versus 5.3% (p > 0.05 for all). Conclusions Deferral of revascularization of LM stenosis on the basis of iFR appears to be safe, with similar long-term outcomes to those in patients in whom LM revascularization was performed according to iFR values.
- Published
- 2020
15. Artificial Intelligence for Aortic Pressure Waveform Analysis During Coronary Angiography: Machine Learning for Patient Safety
- Author
-
James P, Howard, Christopher M, Cook, Tim P, van de Hoef, Martijn, Meuwissen, Guus A, de Waard, Martijn A, van Lavieren, Mauro, Echavarria-Pinto, Ibrahim, Danad, Jan J, Piek, Matthias, Götberg, Rasha K, Al-Lamee, Sayan, Sen, Sukhjinder S, Nijjer, Henry, Seligman, Niels, van Royen, Paul, Knaapen, Javier, Escaned, Darrel P, Francis, Ricardo, Petraco, and Justin E, Davies
- Subjects
Male ,Observer Variation ,Cardiac Catheterization ,Databases, Factual ,Reproducibility of Results ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Middle Aged ,Coronary Angiography ,Europe ,Machine Learning ,Heart Rate ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Arterial Pressure ,Female ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Patient Safety ,Artifacts ,Aorta ,Aged - Abstract
This study developed a neural network to perform automated pressure waveform analysis and allow real-time accurate identification of damping.Damping of aortic pressure during coronary angiography must be identified to avoid serious complications and make accurate coronary physiology measurements. There are currently no automated methods to do this, and so identification of damping requires constant monitoring, which is prone to human error.The neural network was trained and tested versus core laboratory expert opinions derived from 2 separate datasets. A total of 5,709 aortic pressure waveforms of individual heart beats were extracted and classified. The study developed a recurrent convolutional neural network to classify beats as either normal, showing damping, or artifactual. Accuracies were reported using the opinions of 2 independent core laboratories.The neural network was 99.4% accurate (95% confidence interval: 98.8% to 99.6%) at classifying beats from the testing dataset when judged against the opinions of the internal core laboratory. It was 98.7% accurate (95% confidence interval: 98.0% to 99.2%) when judged against the opinions of an external core laboratory not involved in neural network training. The neural network was 100% sensitive, with no beats classified as damped misclassified, with a specificity of 99.8%. The positive predictive and negative predictive values were 98.1% and 99.5%. The 2 core laboratories agreed more closely with the neural network than with each other.Arterial waveform analysis using neural networks allows rapid and accurate identification of damping. This demonstrates how machine learning can assist with patient safety and the quality control of procedures.
- Published
- 2019
16. Resolving the paradox of randomised controlled trials and observational studies comparing multi-vessel angioplasty and culprit only angioplasty at the time of STEMI
- Author
-
Amarjit Sethi, Daniel Keene, Justin E. Davies, Ashwin Balu, Michael Bellamy, Raffi Kaprielian, Matthew Shun-Shin, Masood Khan, Ghada W. Mikhail, Sayan Sen, Mahmud Al-Bustami, Yousif Ahmad, Darrel P. Francis, Christopher M. Cook, Ricardo Petraco, Sukhjinder Nijjer, Rodney A. Foale, Christopher S. Baker, Jamil Mayet, and Iqbal S. Malik
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Culprit ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bias ,Internal medicine ,Angioplasty ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,medicine.disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Survival Analysis ,Surgery ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Meta-analysis ,ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction ,Observational study ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Patients presenting with ST-elevation myocardial infarction commonly have multi-vessel coronary artery disease. After the culprit artery is treated, the optimal treatment strategy for the residual disease is not yet defined. Large observational studies suggest that treatment of residual disease should be deferred but smaller randomised controlled trials (RCTs) suggest multi-vessel primary percutaneous coronary intervention (MV-PPCI) at the time of STEMI is safe. We examine if allocation bias of high-risk patients could explain the conflicting results between observational studies and RCTs and aim to resolve the paradox between the two. Methods A meta-analysis of registries comparing culprit-only PPCI to MV-PPCI was performed. We then determined if high-risk patients were more likely to be allocated to MV-PPCI. A meta-regression was performed to determine if any allocation bias of high-risk patients could explain the difference in outcomes between therapies. Results 47,717 patients (19 studies) were eligible. MV-PPCI had higher mortality than culprit-only PPCI (OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.12 to 2.24, p=0.03). However, higher risk patients were more likely to be allocated to MV-PPCI (OR 1.45, 95% CI 1.18 to 1.78, p=0.0005). When this was accounted for, there was no difference in mortality between culprit-only PPCI and MV-PPCI (OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.69 to 1.41, p=0.94). Discussion Clinicians preferentially allocate higher-risk patients to MV-PPCI at the time of STEMI, resulting in observational studies reporting higher mortality with this strategy. When this is accounted for, these large observational studies in ‘real world' patients support the conclusion of the smaller RCTs in the field: MV-PPCI has equivalent mortality to a culprit-only approach.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Is Now the Time to Debate Traditional Fractional Flow Reserve/Instantaneous Wave-Free Ratio Cut Points?
- Author
-
Justin E. Davies and Christopher M. Cook
- Subjects
business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Fractional flow reserve ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Control theory ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Instantaneous wave-free ratio ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Coronary physiology ,business - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Cardiac Rhythm Device Identification Using Neural Networks
- Author
-
James P, Howard, Louis, Fisher, Matthew J, Shun-Shin, Daniel, Keene, Ahran D, Arnold, Yousif, Ahmad, Christopher M, Cook, James C, Moon, Charlotte H, Manisty, Zach I, Whinnett, Graham D, Cole, Daniel, Rueckert, and Darrel P, Francis
- Subjects
Pacemaker, Artificial ,Databases, Factual ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Radiography, Thoracic ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Thorax - Abstract
This paper reports the development, validation, and public availability of a new neural network-based system which attempts to identify the manufacturer and even the model group of a pacemaker or defibrillator from a chest radiograph.Medical staff often need to determine the model of a pacemaker or defibrillator (cardiac rhythm device) quickly and accurately. Current approaches involve comparing a device's radiographic appearance with a manual flow chart.In this study, radiographic images of 1,676 devices, comprising 45 models from 5 manufacturers were extracted. A convolutional neural network was developed to classify the images, using a training set of 1,451 images. The testing set contained an additional 225 images consisting of 5 examples of each model. The network's ability to identify the manufacturer of a device was compared with that of cardiologists, using a published flowchart.The neural network was 99.6% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 97.5% to 100.0%) accurate in identifying the manufacturer of a device from a radiograph and 96.4% (95% CI: 93.1% to 98.5%) accurate in identifying the model group. Among 5 cardiologists who used the flowchart, median identification of manufacturer accuracy was 72.0% (range 62.2% to 88.9%), and model group identification was not possible. The network's ability to identify the manufacturer of the devices was significantly superior to that of all the cardiologists (p 0.0001 compared with the median human identification; p 0.0001 compared with the best human identification).A neural network can accurately identify the manufacturer and even model group of a cardiac rhythm device from a radiograph and exceeds human performance. This system may speed up the diagnosis and treatment of patients with cardiac rhythm devices, and it is publicly accessible online.
- Published
- 2018
19. Impact of percutaneous revascularization on exercise hemodynamics in patients with stable coronary disease
- Author
-
Christopher M, Cook, Yousif, Ahmad, James P, Howard, Matthew J, Shun-Shin, Amarjit, Sethi, Gerald J, Clesham, Kare H, Tang, Sukhjinder S, Nijjer, Paul A, Kelly, John R, Davies, Iqbal S, Malik, Raffi, Kaprielian, Ghada, Mikhail, Ricardo, Petraco, Firas, Al-Janabi, Grigoris V, Karamasis, Shah, Mohdnazri, Reto, Gamma, Rasha, Al-Lamee, Thomas R, Keeble, Jamil, Mayet, Sayan, Sen, Darrel P, Francis, Justin E, Davies, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
- Subjects
Male ,Exercise Tolerance ,exercise ,coronary physiology ,Microcirculation ,percutaneous coronary intervention ,Hemodynamics ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Middle Aged ,1102 Cardiovascular Medicine And Haematology ,Cohort Studies ,surgical procedures, operative ,stable coronary disease ,1117 Public Health And Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Coronary Circulation ,Humans ,Female ,cardiovascular diseases ,therapeutics ,Aged - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recently, the therapeutic benefits of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) have been challenged in patients with stable coronary artery disease (SCD). OBJECTIVES: The authors examined the impact of PCI on exercise responses in the coronary circulation, the microcirculation, and systemic hemodynamics in patients with SCD. METHODS: A total of 21 patients (mean age 60.3 ± 8.4 years) with SCD and single-vessel coronary stenosis underwent cardiac catheterization. Pre-PCI, patients exercised on a supine ergometer until rate-limiting angina or exhaustion. Simultaneous trans-stenotic coronary pressure-flow measurements were made throughout exercise. Post-PCI, this process was repeated. Physiological parameters, rate-limiting symptoms, and exercise performance were compared between pre-PCI and post-PCI exercise cycles. RESULTS: PCI reduced ischemia as documented by fractional flow reserve value (pre-PCI 0.59 ± 0.18 to post-PCI 0.91 ± 0.07), instantaneous wave-free ratio value (pre-PCI 0.61 ± 0.27 to post-PCI 0.96 ± 0.05) and coronary flow reserve value (pre-PCI 1.7 ± 0.7 to post-PCI 3.1 ± 1.0; p < 0.001 for all). PCI increased peak-exercise average peak coronary flow velocity (p < 0.0001), coronary perfusion pressure (distal coronary pressure; p < 0.0001), systolic blood pressure (p = 0.01), accelerating wave energy (p < 0.001), and myocardial workload (rate-pressure product; p < 0.01). These changes observed immediately following PCI resulted from the abolition of stenosis resistance (p < 0.0001). PCI was also associated with an immediate improvement in exercise time (+67 s; 95% confidence interval: 31 to 102 s; p
- Published
- 2018
20. Physician-patient interactions & communication with conscious patients during simulated cath-lab procedures: An exploratory study
- Author
-
Mohammad Yasin, Iqbal S. Malik, Tanika Kelay, R Kneebone, Fernando Bello, Emmanuel Ako, Kah Leong Chan, Matthew Gold, Christopher M. Cook, St Mary's Coronary Flow Trust, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (E, London Deanery, Wellcome Trust, Health Education North West London, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,020205 medical informatics ,SURGERY ,Exploratory research ,Health Informatics ,02 engineering and technology ,Simulated patient ,patient perspectives ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nonverbal communication ,0302 clinical medicine ,OBSERVATIONAL TEAMWORK ASSESSMENT ,Patient experience ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,OTAS ,ANXIETY ,simulated patients ,Original Research ,Science & Technology ,REFINEMENT ,communication ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Observational methods in psychology ,DEPRESSION ,immersive simulation ,PATIENTS FEARS ,Health Care Sciences & Services ,Modeling and Simulation ,Physical therapy ,SKILLS ,Anxiety ,Observational study ,medicine.symptom ,Thematic analysis ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,INTERVENTION - Abstract
BackgroundThis exploratory study investigates the feasibility for observing and evaluating intraoperative communication practices using simulation techniques. Complex procedures are increasingly performed on patients under local anaesthesia, where patients are fully conscious. Interventional cardiac procedures are one such example where patients have reported high levels of anxiety undergoing procedures. Although communication styles can serve to alleviate patient anxiety during interventions, leading to a better patient experience, there has been little observational research on communication, while patient perspectives in intraoperative contexts have been underexplored.MethodsIn this mixed-methods study, observational analysis was conducted on 20 video-recorded simulated scenarios, featuring physician operators (of varied experience levels), communication and interactions with a simulated patient (trained actor), in a controlled and highly realistic catheter laboratory setting. Two independent raters and the simulated patient embedded in scenarios retrospectively rated physician communication styles and interactions with the patient via four key parameters. Patient perspectives of communication were further explored via a quantitative measure of anxiety and semistructured qualitative interviews.ResultsWhile independent ratings of physician–patient communications demonstrated few discernible differences according to physicians’ experience level, patient ratings were consistently higher for experienced physicians and lower for novice physicians for the four interaction styles. Furthermore, the patient’s anxiety scores were differentiable according to operators’ experience level. Thematic analysis provided further insights into how patient perspectives, including affective dimensions are characterised, and how physician interactions can amplify or attenuate feelings of anxiety through tone of voice, continuity in communication during the procedure, communicating while multitasking and connecting with the patient.ConclusionsOur findings indicate underlying patient assumptions about physicians’ experience levels, intraoperative communication styles and impact on anxiety. While observational methods can be applied to simulated intraoperative clinical contexts, evaluation techniques such as observational rating tools need to incorporate patient perspectives about undergoing conscious surgery.
- Published
- 2018
21. Diagnostic Performance of Resting and Hyperemic Invasive Physiological Indices to Define Myocardial Ischemia: Validation With
- Author
-
Doyeon, Hwang, Ki-Hyun, Jeon, Joo Myung, Lee, Jonghanne, Park, Chee Hae, Kim, Yaliang, Tong, Jinlong, Zhang, Ji-In, Bang, Minseok, Suh, Jin Chul, Paeng, Sang-Hoon, Na, Gi Jeong, Cheon, Christopher M, Cook, Justin E, Davies, and Bon-Kwon, Koo
- Subjects
Male ,Cardiac Catheterization ,Nitrogen Radioisotopes ,Coronary Stenosis ,Myocardial Perfusion Imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Hyperemia ,Middle Aged ,Reference Standards ,Coronary Angiography ,Severity of Illness Index ,Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,ROC Curve ,Ammonia ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Area Under Curve ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Republic of Korea ,Humans ,Arterial Pressure ,Female ,Registries ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Aged - Abstract
The authors sought to compare the diagnostic performance of fractional flow reserve (FFR), instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR), and resting distal coronary artery pressure/aortic pressure (Pd/Pa) usingThe diagnostic performance of invasive physiological indices was reported to be different according to the reference to define the presence of myocardial ischemia.A total of 115 consecutive patients with left anterior descending artery stenosis who underwent bothAll invasive physiological indices correlated with CFR and RFR (all p values 0.001). The overall diagnostic accuracies of FFR, iFR, and resting Pd/Pa were not different for CFR 2.0 (FFR 69.6%, iFR 73.9%, and resting Pd/Pa 70.4%) and RFR 0.75 (FFR 73.9%, iFR 71.3%, and resting Pd/Pa 74.8%). Discrimination and reclassification abilities of invasive physiological indices were comparable for CFR. For RFR, FFR showed better discrimination and reclassification ability than resting indices (IDI = 0.170 and category-free NRI = 0.971 for iFR; IDI = 0.183 and category-free NRI = 1.058 for resting Pd/Pa; all p values 0.001).The diagnostic performance of invasive physiological indices showed no differences in the prediction of myocardial ischemia defined by CFR. Using RFR as a reference, FFR showed a better discrimination and reclassification ability than resting indices.
- Published
- 2016
22. Is FFR
- Author
-
Justin E, Davies and Christopher M, Cook
- Subjects
Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,Coronary Stenosis ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Angiography - Published
- 2016
23. Indicators of Middle School Implementation: How Do Kentucky’s Schools to Watch Measure Up?
- Author
-
Christopher M. Cook, Lenore J. Kinne, and Shawn A. Faulkner
- Subjects
Program evaluation ,Medical education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Socialization ,Professional development ,Primary education ,Academic achievement ,Education ,Excellence ,Political science ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Survey data collection ,media_common ,Social equality - Abstract
BackgroundPreparing middle grades students to be successful in the 21st century has long been the goal of the middle school movement. For students to be successful, it is imperative that they receive an education that goes beyond basic instruction in reading, writing, and mathematics to include opportunities for them to use their unique abilities to solve real-world problems, work collaboratively, and deepen their knowledge base in a safe, supportive, and nurturing environment.In recent years, middle schools have been criticized and accused of replacing academic rigor with identity development. In the report Mayhem in the Middle: How Middle Schools have Failed America-and How to Make Them Work, Cheri Pierson Yecke (2005) stated, "Middle schoolism is based on pseudo-scientific theories and downplays academic achievement. The middle school movement advances the notion that academic achievement should take a back seat to such ends as self-exploration, socialization, and group learning" (p. ii). Other organizations and councils with a long history of focusing on middle level education have been proponents of rigorous academic programs for middle level students (i.e., Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development, 1989; Jackson & Davis, 2000; National Forum to Accelerate Middle-Grades Reform, 2006b; National Middle School Association, 2003), while continuing to address the social, emotional, and physical needs of these adolescents. This study acknowledges the middle school movement has both proponents and critics but that both positions seek a relatively similar goal-an excellent educational experience for all middle level students.In an effort to heighten the sense of urgency concerning the need for high-performing middle schools, the National Forum to Accelerate Middle- Grades Reform launched the national Schools to Watch (STW) program to recognize middle level schools that are on a trajectory toward academic excellence, developmental responsiveness, and social equity (National Forum to Accelerate Middle-Grades Reform, 2006b). Since its inception, the National Forum's Schools to Watch program has expanded to include state-level recognition programs. This study explored the relationship between schools recognized as a Kentucky School to Watch (KSTW) and the implementation of the tenets of the middle school concept as outlined in This We Believe (NMSA, 2003), a commonly accepted standard for effective middle level education. Though they are separate entities, the visions for effective middle schools espoused by the National Forum and the National Middle School Association (NMSA) are similar. Because Kentucky's Schools to Watch were evaluated using the criteria established by the National Forum to Accelerate Middle-Grades Reform, using the same criteria to evaluate other schools would be unfairly biased against schools that have not applied for the Kentucky School to Watch designation. To avoid this bias, This We Believe was used as the conceptual framework for this research. Using survey data and data available through the Kentucky Department of Education, the researchers examined Kentucky Schools to Watch from two perspectives and sought to:* Compare the perceived level of middle school implementation between schools designated a Kentucky School to Watch and Kentucky middle schools that have not earned this designation* Compare the levels of academic achievement between schools designated a Kentucky School to Watch and those that have not earned this designation.This study addresses two key research questions outlined by National Middle School Association's A 21st Century Research Agenda (1997): (1) What is the depth and breadth of implementation of middle level education programs, policies, and practices necessary to bring about various levels of change? (2) What are the direct and indirect effects of middle school programs, policies, and practice on student achievement? Having this information helps validate the use of the Schools to Watch criteria as a means of middle school program evaluation and staff development. …
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Testing vs. Teaching: The Perceived Impact of Assessment Demands on Middle Grades Instructional Practices
- Author
-
Christopher M. Cook and Shawn A. Faulkner
- Subjects
Education reform ,Political science ,Teaching method ,Accountability ,Mathematics education ,Philosophy of education ,Descriptive research ,Curriculum ,Memorization ,Education ,Likert scale - Abstract
As a result of the pressures of educational reform and high-stakes assessment, some schools run the risk of foregoing active, student-centered learning activities for building test-taking skills and the memorization of discrete facts (Gredler, 1999; Jackson & Davis, 2000). Coupled with the additional pressure to fulfill the expectations of No Child Left Behind (NCLB), educators may feel the need to abandon the tenets of the middle school philosophy for more teacher-centered instructional approaches. Since the enactment of the Kentucky Education Reform Act (KERA) in 1990, schools and teachers have been accountable for the achievement of students and implementation of the state’s assessment standards. Using the responses of 216 educators from 17 middle schools in Northern Kentucky, this descriptive study explores middle grade teachers’ perceptions of how high-stakes testing and state accountability standards influence instructional strategies utilized in the classroom. Results indicate that though teachers acknowledge the importance of including active and student-centered strategies on a consistent basis, the state tests seem to drive the curriculum and warrant more teacher-focused instructional methods—lecture, worksheets, and whole-class discussion. In addition, recommendations are offered to improve instructional practice, enhance middle grades teacher preparation programs, and guide future research.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Comparison of bolus versus continuous thermodilution derived indices of microvascular dysfunction in revascularized coronary syndromes
- Author
-
Samer Fawaz, Federico Marin, Sarosh A Khan, Rupert F G Simpson, Rafail A Kotronias, Jason Chai, Oxford Acute Myocardial Infarction (OxAMI) Study Investigators, Firas Al-Janabi, Rohan Jagathesan, Klio Konstantinou, Shah R Mohdnazri, Gerald J Clesham, Kare H Tang, Christopher M Cook, Keith M Channon, Adrian P Banning, John R Davies, Grigoris V Karamasis, Giovanni L De Maria, and Thomas R Keeble
- Subjects
Bolus ,Continuous ,Thermodilution ,Coronary ,Microvascular ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: The assessment of coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) using invasive methods is a field of growing interest, however the preferred method remains debated. Bolus and continuous thermodilution are commonly used methods, but weak agreement has been observed in patients with angina with non-obstructive coronary arteries (ANOCA). This study examined their agreement in revascularized acute coronary syndromes (ACS) and chronic coronary syndromes (CCS) patients. Objective: To compare bolus thermodilution and continuous thermodilution indices of CMD in revascularized ACS and CCS patients and assess their diagnostic agreement at pre-defined cut-off points. Methods: Patients from two centers underwent paired bolus and continuous thermodilution assessments after revascularization. CMD indices were compared between the two methods and their agreements at binary cut-off points were assessed. Results: Ninety-six patients and 116 vessels were included. The mean age was 64 ± 11 years, and 20 (21 %) were female. Overall, weak correlations were observed between the Index of Microcirculatory Resistance (IMR) and continuous thermodilution microvascular resistance (Rµ) (rho = 0.30p = 0.001). The median coronary flow reserve (CFR) from continuous thermodilution (CFRcont) and bolus thermodilution (CFRbolus) were 2.19 (1.76–2.67) and 2.55 (1.50–3.58), respectively (p
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Diastolic-systolic velocity ratio to detect coronary stenoses under physiological resting conditions: a mechanistic study
- Author
-
Jan J Piek, Javier Escaned, Guus A de Waard, Christopher J Broyd, Christopher M Cook, Nina W van der Hoeven, Ricardo Petraco, Sukhjinder S Nijjer, Tim P van de Hoef, Mauro Echavarria-Pinto, Martijn Meuwissen, Sayan Sen, Paul Knaapen, Niels van Royen, and Justin E Davies
- Subjects
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Objective Diastolic-systolic velocity ratio (DSVR) is a resting index to assess stenoses in the left anterior descending artery (LAD). DSVR can be measured by echocardiographic or intracoronary Doppler flow velocity. The objective of this cohort study was to elucidate the fundamental rationale underlying the decreased DSVR in coronary stenoses.Methods In cohort 1, simultaneous measurements of intracoronary Doppler flow velocity and pressure were acquired in the LAD of 228 stable patients. Phasic stenosis resistance, microvascular resistance and total vascular resistance (defined as stenosis and microvascular resistance combined) were studied during physiological resting conditions. Stenoses were classified according to severity by strata of 0.10 fractional flow reserve (FFR) units.Results DSVR was decreased in stenoses with lower FFR. Stenosis resistance was equal in systole and diastole for every FFR stratum. Microvascular resistance was consistently higher during systole than diastole. In lower FFR strata, stenosis resistance as a percentage of the total vascular resistance increases both during systole and diastole. The difference between the stenosis resistance as a percentage of total vascular resistance during systole and diastole increases for lower FFR strata, with an accompanying rise in diastolic-systolic resistance ratio. A significant inverse correlation was observed between DSVR and the diastolic-systolic resistance ratio (r=0.91, p
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.