1.A case of subclavian stenosis treated by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty.
Byung Su YOO ; Kyoung Gu YOH ; Hyee Seung HONG ; Seung Ok CHOI ; Kwang Hoon LEE ; Jung Han YOON ; Kyung Hun CHOE ; Jin Hyun PARK
Korean Journal of Nephrology 1992;11(3):297-300
No abstract available.
Angioplasty*
;
Constriction, Pathologic*
2.The Factors to Influence on Immediate Elastic Recoil after Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty.
Kwang Seon SONG ; Yong Gyu LEE ; Kyoung Gu YOH ; Yun Kyung CHO ; Jung Han YOON ; Keum Soo PARK ; Kyung Hoon CHOE
Korean Circulation Journal 1994;24(3):466-473
BACKGROUND: Elastic recoil contributes to the residual lumen reduction immediately after PTCA. We evaluated the factors to influence on immediate elastic recoil after the successful PTCA. METHODS: 88 patients(96 lesions) were studied by quantitative angiography. Angiograms were obtained in two identical near orthogonal projection before PTCA and immediately after the last balloon deflation. RESULTS: Immediately after PTCA, minimal luminal diameter increased from 0.7+/-0.6mm to 1.9+/-0.6mm and percent diameter stenosis was reduced from 77+/-20 to 34+/-21%. The calculated mean elastic recoil was 0.5+/-0.7mm in diameter and % elastic recoils were lesser both in calcified(3+/-23 vs 23+/-24%, p=0.04) and thrombotic(9+/-20 vs 23+/-35%, p=0.02) lesions. The elastic recoil increased significantly according to the inflation diameter of balloon(r=0.32, p<0.01. No significant correlation between the immediate elastic recoil and age, sex, risk factors, eccentricity and lesion length was shown. CONCLUSION: The elastic recoil immediately after a successful PTCA was dependent on the existance of calcium and thrombus on the target lesion and on the balloon size at the maximal inflation.
Angiography
;
Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary*
;
Calcium
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Inflation, Economic
;
Phenobarbital
;
Risk Factors
;
Thrombosis