Left main coronary artery rotational atherectomy and stenting.

2000 
Background. Coronary artery bypass surgery is a difficult option in patients who are not candidates for bypass surgery and high-risk patients with critical left main coronary artery (LMCA) disease. We report outcomes and short-term follow-up of patients who had LMCA rotational atherectomy and/or stenting, assess the role of these interventions in protected and unprotected significant LMCA stenosis, and review the literature. Methods. We reviewed the cases of seven men with critical LMCA stenosis for whom coronary artery bypass surgery was considered a high risk. Five patients had rotational atherectomy, one had coronary artery stenting, and one had both. Results. In all cases, angiographic success was achieved, and symptoms were relieved. Six patients were discharged from the hospital in 3 to 6 days. One patient who had cardiogenic shock, respiratory failure, and acute renal failure before the procedure died of arrhythmia 4 days afterward. Another patient had elective coronary artery bypass graft surgery 3 weeks later for recurrent angina. Cardiac catheterization was repeated in 1 month for chest pain in three patients at 4 to 7 months follow-up, and none had progression of residual stenosis in the LMCA. Conclusions. Our study suggests that LMCA rotational atherectomy and stenting are safe and effective revascularization procedures in high-risk patients and patients who are not candidates for bypass surgery.
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