Importancia de las lesiones severas no tratadas en pacientes con síndrome coronario agudo y angioplastia de la lesión causante
2003
Introduction and objectives. Patients with acute coronary syndromes may have significantly stenotic nonculprit lesions that do not show complex lesion morphology. We investigated whether these lesions were prone to become unstable since they exist within a prothrombotic and inflammatory systemic milieu. Patients and method. We evaluated the clinical course of 150 patients after successful angioplasty of a culprit lesion: 75 patients with a severely stenotic but uncomplicated nonculprit lesion (group A) and 75 patients without these lesions (group B). Results. In group A, 1 patient (1.3%) required angioplasty of an initially nonculprit lesion, and in group B, 2 patients (2.6%) died in cardiogenic shock. After 1 year of follow-up, in group A, 4 patients (5.3%) died (cardiac deaths), 1 patient (1.3%) had a myocardial infarction, and 10 patients (13.3%) underwent a repeat revascularization procedure, which in 6 cases (8%) was angioplasty of an initially nonculprit lesion. In all 6 patients with angioplasty of the initially nonculprit lesion, revascularization was done within the first 4 months and was indicated for unstable angina. In group B, 1 patient (1.3%) died (noncardiac death) and 2 patients (2.6%) underwent a repeat revascularization procedure because of restenosis. Survival curves were significantly different between both groups. Belonging to group A was the only independent predictor for events, and within this group location of the lesion in the left anterior descending artery was the main predictor. Conclusions. The presence of nonculprit lesions of uncomplicated morphology at the time of a percutaneous revascularization procedure for a culprit lesion in patients with acute coronary syndrome is a short- and middle-term predictor of a moderate rate of recurrent events when these initially innocuous lesions become unstable.
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