1.Cerebral Infarction after Hybrid Arch TEVAR
Toshiki Fujiyoshi ; Hitoshi Matsuda ; Keitaro Domae ; Yutaka Iba ; Hiroshi Tanaka ; Hiroaki Sasaki ; Kenji Minatoya ; Junjiro Kobayashi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2013;42(4):255-259
Among 62 patients who underwent hybrid arch TEVAR, which is a combination of supra-aortic bypass and TEVAR to treat arch aneurysm, 5 patients encountered postoperative cerebral infarction. In 2 patients, whose thoracic aorta were extremely shaggy, cerebral infarction were multiple and fatal. Other 3 patients, whose aorta were not shaggy, developed visual disturbance after TEVAR and minor cerebral infarction were detected in the area of vertebral artery. To prevent cerebral infarction after hybrid arch TEVAR, the blood flow from the left subclavian to vertebral artery is considered to be significant.
2.Qualitative and quantitative evaluation of coronary plaques with 64-slice computed tomography in comparison with intravascular ultrasound.
Hong-hua YE ; Hideaki KANEDA ; Shigeru SAITO ; Takaaki SHIONO ; Shinji TANAKA ; Yusuke MIYASHITA ; Saeko TAKAHASHI ; Yoshio TAKETANI ; Hiroshi DOMAE
Chinese Journal of Cardiology 2007;35(7):648-651
OBJECTIVETo explore the diagnostic feasibility of noninvasive assessment of coronary atherosclerotic plaques with MSCT in comparison with IVUS.
METHODSContrast-enhanced MSCT angiography (Sensation 64, Siemens Medical Solutions) was performed before percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and three-vessel IVUS (Boston Scientific, Natick, MA) was performed during procedure in 12 patients with stable angina pectoris. Complete investigation was digitally stored, and assessed offline with EchoPlaque (Indec Systems, Mountain View, CA). The comparison of MSCT with IVUS was performed based on segment at plaque site (American Heart Association 15-segment model).
RESULTSA total of 88 segments in 31 vessels (left anterior descending: 12, left circumflex: 10, and right coronary artery: 9) were investigated by both IVUS and MSCT. Among 68 assessable segments (54 proximal-middle segments and 14 distal segments) by MSCT (20 segments were excluded for poor image quality: 16 for severe calcification, 2 for motion artifact, 2 for poor opacification), MSCT correctly detected 47 of the 51 segments with plaques (sensitivity: 92%), and correctly evaluated 16 of 17 segments without plaques (specificity: 94%). Concerning plaque quantification, MSCT correlated well with IVUS in grading whether the vessel obstruction was less or more than 50% (simple kappa: 0.63, 95% CI: from 0.47 to 0.78). Plaque area by MSCT also correlated with that by IVUS (r = 0.53, P < 0.01), but overestimated plaque area [(9.09 +/- 3.89) mm(2) vs. (6.80 +/- 2.81) mm(2), P < 0.01]. In addition, 30 of 43 hypoechoic compositions were detected as low-density compositions by MSCT with average CT number as 67.39 HU.
CONCLUSIONSIn segments without severe calcification, contrast-enhanced 64-slice CT angiography could detect plaques in coronary artery with high accuracy. Plaque area quantification by MSCT correlated with that of IVUS though with limited accuracy.
Coronary Angiography ; Coronary Artery Disease ; diagnostic imaging ; Humans ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed ; methods ; Ultrasonography, Interventional