Korean Circ J.  1999 Jan;29(1):22-27. 10.4070/kcj.1999.29.1.22.

Predictors of Acute Thrombotic Occlusion after Coronary Intervention in Acute Myocardial Infarction

Abstract

BACKGROUND
The most important acute complication of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) is abrupt closure by dissection and thrombus, which account for the majority of deaths and emergency coronary artery bypass procedures associated with PTCA. We sought to determine the relationship between clinical, angiographic characteristics and abrupt thrombotic closure related to coronary intervention.
METHODS
One hundred thirty two patients (61.6+/-8.0 year, 98 male) underwent PTCA or stenting under the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction were analyzed at Chonnam University Hospital between Jan '97 and Jun '98. Patients were divided into two groups, one, 14 patients (Group A, 61.7+/-8.0 year, 9 male), who developed thrombotic occlusion, and the other, 118 patients (Group B, 61.5+/-8.0 year, 89 male) who did not develop abrupt closure related to the coronary intervention. RESULT: There were no significant differences in age, sex, risk factors, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, location of lesion, branch involvement, lesion severity, AHA/ACC morphology between two groups. The incidence of intra-coronary thrombus was greater in Group A than in Group B (44% vs. 2%, p=0.025). Acute thrombotic occlusion related to the coronary interventions developed more frequently in the lesions within two days after the symptomatic onset (55% vs. 19%, p=0.035) and in the right coronary artery (RCA) lesions (55% vs. 24%, p=0.041).
CONCLUSION
Predictors of abrupt thrombotic occlusion during coronary intervention in patients with acute myocardial infarction are intracoronary thrombus, earlier intervenion within 2 days after onset of aucte myocardial infarction and RCA lesion.

Keyword

Acute Thrombotic Occlusion; Acute Myocardial Infarction; Coronary Intervention

MeSH Terms

Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary
Blood Sedimentation
C-Reactive Protein
Coronary Artery Bypass
Coronary Vessels
Diagnosis
Emergencies
Fibrinogen
Humans
Incidence
Jeollanam-do
Myocardial Infarction*
Partial Thromboplastin Time
Risk Factors
Stents
Thrombosis
C-Reactive Protein
Fibrinogen
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