Continuous vs Bolus Thermodilution to Assess Microvascular Resistance Reserve.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_681376CA1588
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Continuous vs Bolus Thermodilution to Assess Microvascular Resistance Reserve.
Journal
JACC. Cardiovascular interventions
Author(s)
Gallinoro E., Bertolone D.T., Mizukami T., Paolisso P., Bermpeis K., Munhoz D., Sakai K., Seki R., Ohashi H., Esposito G., Caglioni S., Mileva N., Leone A., Candreva A., Belmonte M., Storozhenko T., Viscusi M.M., Vanderheyden M., Wyffels E., Bartunek J., Sonck J., Barbato E., Collet C., De Bruyne B.
ISSN
1876-7605 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1936-8798
Publication state
Published
Issued date
27/11/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
16
Number
22
Pages
2767-2777
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Coronary flow reserve (CFR) and microvascular resistance reserve (MRR) can, in principle, be derived by any method assessing coronary flow.
The aim of this study was to compare CFR and MRR as derived by continuous (CFR <sub>cont</sub> and MRR <sub>cont</sub> ) and bolus thermodilution (CFR <sub>bolus</sub> and MRR <sub>bolus</sub> ).
A total of 175 patients with chest pain and nonobstructive coronary artery disease were studied. Bolus and continuous thermodilution measurements were performed in the left anterior descending coronary artery. MRR was calculated as the ratio of CFR to fractional flow reserve and corrected for changes in systemic pressure. In 102 patients, bolus and continuous thermodilution measurements were performed in duplicate to assess test-retest reliability.
Mean CFR <sub>bolus</sub> was higher than CFR <sub>cont</sub> (3.47 ± 1.42 and 2.67 ± 0.81 [P < 0.001], mean difference 0.80, upper limit of agreement 3.92, lower limit of agreement -2.32). Mean MRR <sub>bolus</sub> was also higher than MRR <sub>cont</sub> (4.40 ± 1.99 and 3.22 ± 1.02 [P < 0.001], mean difference 1.2, upper limit of agreement 5.08, lower limit of agreement -2.71). The correlation between CFR and MRR values obtained using both methods was significant but weak (CFR, r = 0.28 [95% CI: 0.14-0.41]; MRR, r = 0.26 [95% CI: 0.16-0.39]; P < 0.001 for both). The precision of both CFR and MRR was higher when assessed using continuous thermodilution compared with bolus thermodilution (repeatability coefficients of 0.89 and 2.79 for CFR <sub>cont</sub> and CFR <sub>bolus</sub> , respectively, and 1.01 and 3.05 for MRR <sub>cont</sub> and MRR <sub>bolus</sub> , respectively).
Compared with bolus thermodilution, continuous thermodilution yields lower values of CFR and MRR accompanied by an almost 3-fold reduction of the variability in the measured results.
Keywords
Humans, Coronary Circulation, Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial, Thermodilution/methods, Reproducibility of Results, Treatment Outcome, Coronary Vessels, Microcirculation, CFR, FFR, angina, coronary artery disease, coronary flow, microvascular dysfunction
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
01/12/2023 10:38
Last modification date
13/01/2024 8:09
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