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European Heart Journal Advance Access originally published online on September 26, 2006
European Heart Journal 2006 27(20):2406-2412; doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehl270
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© The European Society of Cardiology 2006. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

The functional reserve of collaterals supplying long-term chronic total coronary occlusions in patients without prior myocardial infarction

Gerald S. Werner1,*, Ralf Surber2, Markus Ferrari2, Michael Fritzenwanger2 and Hans R. Figulla2

1 Department of Cardiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Medizinische Klinik I, Klinikum Darmstadt, Grafenstrasse 9, D-64283 Darmstadt, Germany
2 Clinic for Internal Medicine I, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Erlanger Allee 101, D-07740 Jena, Germany

Received 30 December 2005; revised 18 August 2006; accepted 11 September 2006; online publish-ahead-of-print 26 September 2006.

* Corresponding author. Tel: +49 1149 6151 1076401; fax: +49 1149 6151 1076496. E-mail address: gerald.werner{at}klinikum-darmstadt.de

Aims Chronic total coronary occlusions (CTOs) with angiographically well-developed collaterals may be considered to provide sufficient blood supply to the occluded segment, and the indication for revascularization may be questioned. Therefore, the collateral function and functional reserve in patients with a CTO without a prior Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI) were assessed.

Methods and results Invasive assessment of collateral function was done during successful percutaneous coronary intervention in 107 patients with a CTO and no prior Q-wave MI. Intracoronary Doppler flow velocity and pressure recordings were obtained distal to the occlusion before the first balloon inflation and collateral function indexes calculated. In 62 patients, additional pharmacological stress testing was done by intravenous adenosine (140 µg/kg/min) to assess the collateral flow reserve. Patients with normal and impaired regional dysfunction were compared. Collateral function was similar in patients with and without regional left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. In both groups, 78% collaterals provided a collateral pressure index at baseline >0.3, sufficient to prevent ischaemia during a balloon occlusion, with a minimum of 0.2 in those with preserved LV function. A Doppler-derived function index showed a wider variation due to the high prevalence of microvascular dysfunction in CTOs. Only 7% of patients had an increase in collateral flow reserve >2.0 during pharmacological stress, whereas coronary steal occurred in one-third independent of regional LV function.

Conclusion A limited increase in collateral flow and the high prevalence of coronary steal during stress underscore the functional limitation of collaterals in CTOs without prior Q-wave MI. Even presumably ‘well-collateralized’ CTOs may benefit from a revascularization.

Key Words: Collateral function • Chronic total occlusion • Revascularization • Intracoronary Doppler • Intracoronary pressure


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