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Abstract
Directional atherectomy removes plaque in a targeted portion of a vessel wall. In practice, orienting the cutter toward maximal plaque accumulation and assessing the depth of vessel excision is difficult with angiographic guidance alone. Accordingly, we designed and tested a prototype catheter that combines ultrasound imaging capability with directional atherectomy in a single device. Twenty-seven in vitro vessels (32 lesions) were treated with atherectomy alone or with atherectomy combined with ultrasound. Lesion characteristics before and after the procedure were similar in each group. A significant decrease in the incidence of subintimal tissue excision was observed in the atherectomy-ultrasound group (21.1%) compared to the group that had debulking with atherectomy alone (54.5%). In addition, among specimens with media and/or adventitia the relative amount of subintimal tissue was significantly less (p < 0.001) with ultrasound guidance than with atherectomy alone (11.2% +/- 10.1% vs 34.2% +/- 8.5%). We conclude that ultrasound-guided directional atherectomy is technically feasible and may aid in achieving maximal plaque debulking and reduce the amount of subintimal injury.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995QK46500028
View details for PubMedID 7872191