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  • Title: [Value and limits of balloon laser-assisted angioplasty in the treatment of acute obstruction during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty].
    Author: Glatt B, Morice MC, Royer T, Rosenblat E.
    Journal: Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss; 1992 Nov; 85(11):1551-7. PubMed ID: 1300954.
    Abstract:
    One of the problems of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty is acute occlusion during the procedure, the main cause of serious complications and emergency coronary bypass surgery. Acute occlusion is generally related to severe intimal dissection and/or thrombosis. In animal experiments, it is possible to treat intimal dissection and dessicate thrombi by balloon laser angioplasty. Using this method, a programmed laser energy may be delivered to the arterial wall via a fiber optic system linked to a Nd:Yag laser during classical balloon inflation. This has been proposed for the treatment of acute coronary occlusion. Between September 1989 and August 1990, 923 patients underwent coronary angioplasty at the Centre Cardiologique du Nord. Peroperative acute occlusions occurred 52 times (3.9%) in 52 patients. Sixteen patients who were "candidates" for emergency coronary bypass surgery (residual stenosis > or = 75%; delayed flow; myocardial ischaemia) were treated by laser balloon angioplasty, 14 with success (87%). Two patients had to be operated as an emergency. There were no hospital deaths. The average follow-up was 4.7 months for the 14 non-operated patients. Systematic control coronary angiography was refused by 2 asymptomatic patients. In the other 12 patients investigated 1 to 17 months after the procedure, there were 10 restenoses (76%), 6 of which were treated by repeat angioplasty and 3 by coronary bypass surgery. These results show that balloon laser angioplasty is very effective in the treatment of peroperative acute occlusions, enabling emergency coronary bypass surgery to be avoided in 87% of cases, but it is associated with a very high restenosis rate which is difficult to accept.
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