Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty: Its potential impact on surgery for coronary artery disease

1980 
Abstract The potential impact of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty on surgery for angina pectoris was evaluated in 500 consecutive patients referred because of intractable symptoms. A positive lesion, that is, one appropriate for percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, was defined as proximal, discrete, segmental, subtotal, noncalcific and stenotic. Significant disease was observed in 1,079 major coronary arteries, of which 9.4 percent were not appropriate for bypass surgery. Positive lesions were observed in 115 arteries (10.7 percent); these were in the left anterior descending artery in 60; in the right coronary artery in 37 and in the left circumflex artery in 18 cases. Main left coronary artery disease was present in 31 patients with six lesions appropriate for coronary angioplasty. Of these six patients none had isolated left main coronary artery disease. Operable coronary lesions were noted in 474 patients of whom 105 (22 percent) had positive lesions appropriate for angioplasty. The age of patients with such lesions was not significantly different from that of the remaining patients. However, the duration of clinical heart disease was significantly (p
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