Ww. Suh et al., Clinical, angiographic, and procedural correlates of abrupt vascular closure during coronary intervention: A 10-year experience at Mayo Clinic, CATHET C IN, 47(4), 1999, pp. 391-395
A large matched-cohort study was carried out to determine correlates of in-
hospital abrupt vascular closure (AC), Univariate analysis identified curre
nt cigarette smoking (P = 0.021), myocardial infarction within 24 hr prior
to procedure (P = 0.0035), emergency procedure (P = 0.02), lesion thrombus
(P = 0.0001), and lesion angulation (P = 0.021) as significant clinical and
angiographic variables, Relative to balloon angioplasty (PTCA), use of ath
erectomy (P = 0.015) and laser devices (P = 0.018) but not elective stent p
lacement (P = 0.97) were associated with increased risk of AC, In the multi
variate model, current cigarette smoking (P = 0.0474), lesion thrombus (P =
0.0001), lesion angulation (P = 0.0124), use of atherectomy devices (P = 0
.001), and laser devices (P = 0.0037) remained as significant correlates of
increased AC events. In conclusion, the risk of AC appears associated prim
arily with lesion characteristics and use of nonballoon devices other than
stents. Elective stent placement did not appear to reduce AC risk over conv
entional PTCA; the small number of patients studied may have prevented any
benefit from being observed, Cathet. Cardiovasc. Intervent. 47:391-395, 199
9. (C) 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.