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  • Title: Time-course of vascular dysfunction of brachial artery after transradial access for coronary angiography.
    Author: Munoz-Mendoza J, Ghatak A, Pinto Miranda V, Bahadu S, De Marchena E, Ferreira AC, Mendoza CE.
    Journal: Catheter Cardiovasc Interv; 2016 Jan 01; 87(1):101-6. PubMed ID: 26120053.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Prior studies have demonstrated endothelial and smooth muscle brachial artery dysfunction after transradial cardiac catheterization for diagnostic coronary angiography. The duration of this vascular dysfunction is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To determine the time-course of endothelial and smooth muscle cell dysfunction in the upstream brachial artery after transradial cardiac catheterization. METHODS: We studied 22 consecutive patients with suspected coronary artery disease (age 64.4 ± 7.7 years) undergoing diagnostic transradial cardiac catheterization. Using high-resolution vascular ultrasound, we measured ipsilateral brachial artery diameter changes during reactive hyperemia (endothelium-dependent dilatation) and administration of sublingual nitroglycerin (endothelium-independent dilatation). The measurements were taken at baseline (before cardiac catheterization), 6 h, 24 h, 1 week, and 1 month postprocedure. The contralateral brachial artery served as a control. RESULTS: Ipsilateral brachial artery diameter during endothelium-dependent dilatation decreased significantly compared with the contralateral diameters at 6 h and 24 h after transradial cardiac catheterization (3.22 vs. 4.11 and 3.29 vs. 4.11, respectively, P < 0.001). The administration of nitroglycerin did not affect this difference. At 1 week and 1 month postprocedure there was no significant difference in diameter of the ipsilateral versus the contralateral brachial artery. As expected the contralateral brachial artery showed no significant changes in diameter. CONCLUSION: Our results showed that transradial cardiac catheterization causes transient vascular endothelial and smooth muscle dysfunction of the ipsilateral brachial artery, which resolves within 1 week postprocedure. These findings strongly suggest the absence of systemic vascular dysfunction after transradial catheterization both immediately postprocedure as well as 1 week postprocedure. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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