In our experience, the use of this device is very useful for the revascularization of chronic femoral occlusions, even calcific, in which an accurate re-entry cannot be achieved with the conventional subintimal technique. In these cases, the Outback device grants high technical success rates and a significant reduction of procedural and fluoroscopy times.
3D time-resolved contrast-enhanced MRI allows quantitative evaluation of pulmonary regional perfusion in patients affected by COPD, identifying patients in which perfusion defects are resolved in the clinical-stabilization phase. This technique might allow the identification of patients in whom vasospasm may be the main responsible of pulmonary hypoperfusion during acute COPD exacerbation, with potential advantages on the clinical management of these patients.
When a heel lesion is present and the transcutaneous oximetry recorded on the dorsum of the foot does not confirm the presence of critical limb ischemia (not ≤30 mmHg), a second oximetry recorded on the rearfoot is useful to point out ischemia of the peroneal artery and/or of the posterior tibial artery.
“Carotid blowout syndrome” is defined as a hemorrhage caused by rupture of the carotid artery and its branches, and may be a severe complication of rhinopharyngeal carcinoma. This study aimed to highlight the usefulness and versatility of endovascular stent-graft placement as a rescue treatment in life-threatening carotid blowout syndrome. We describe the unconventional use of a 6×5 mm balloon-expandable coronaric covered stent in a patient with a diagnosis of spinocellular rhinopharyngeal carcinoma, followed by carotid blowout syndrome. Although long-term follow-up is needed to assess the eventuality of bleeding recurrence, the immediate clinical results were satisfactory.
Background Stroke is the third most common cause of death and one of the most common cause of long-term disability in the Western world. Carotid plaque morphology is the main predictor of cerebrovascular accidents, more than the degree of stenosis.Aims The primary aim was to validate virtual histologyintravascular ultrasound (VH-IVUS) as a diagnostic tool for carotid plaque characterization, by comparison with histology, through ex-vivo evaluation of carotid plaques. The secondary target was to compare VH-IVUS with highresolution MRI (HR-MRI) through in-vivo evaluation of carotid artery plaques.
Materials and methodsIn the ex-vivo study, data were acquired from six carotid arteries explanted from six symptomatic male patients with a mean age of 72 W 9.64 years. Sectional images obtained with the IVUS catheter were compared with digitalized histological images. Twelve consecutive patients (eight men, four women, mean age of 75 W 6.33 years), candidates for carotid artery stenting, were included in the in-vivo study. All histological and HR-MR images were converted to a digital format and the exact percentages of the four plaque components were determined.Results Forty-two images were used for correlation between VH-IVUS and histology. Quantitative analysis of different plaque components revealed a good concordance (0.82) between the two methods [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.69-0.92]. Precision rates of VH-IVUS for concordance with true histology of different plaque components were 99.4% for fibrous tissue, 85.9% for fibrolipid tissue, 71.4% for calcium and 83.4% for necrosis. Comparison between HR-MRI and VH-IVUS was performed on 27 images. Concordance between the two methods was 0.84 (95% CI 0.69-0.92). Precision rates were, respectively, 85.3, 95.2, 90.2 and 82.0%.
ConclusionWe believe that VH-IVUS may be useful when a quick intraprocedural evaluation of a carotid plaque before or after stent placement is required, but is not suitable for the accurate in-vivo differentiation between stable and unstable plaques prone to rupture, due to the suboptimal assessment of the necrotic component, fibrous cap thickness and rupture signs. We do believe, however, that these results need further evaluation in larger populations to be confirmed. J Cardiovasc Med 2012, 13:000-000
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