Francesco Prati 1,2 *, MD; Maria Cera 1, MD; Vito Ramazzotti 1, MD; Fabrizio Imola 1, MD; Rocco Giudice 3, MD; Mario Albertucci 2,3

EIJ11__365_Prati.qxd 22/10/07 16:38 Page 365 Clinical research Safety and feasibility of a new non-occlusive technique for facilitated intracoron...
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EIJ11__365_Prati.qxd

22/10/07

16:38

Page 365

Clinical research

Safety and feasibility of a new non-occlusive technique for facilitated intracoronary optical coherence tomography (OCT) acquisition in various clinical and anatomical scenarios Francesco Prati1,2*, MD; Maria Cera1, MD; Vito Ramazzotti1, MD; Fabrizio Imola1, MD; Rocco Giudice3, MD; Mario Albertucci2,3 1. Interventional Cardiology, San Giovanni Hospital, Rome, Italy; 2. Centro per la Lotta contro l’Infarto Foundation, Rome, Italy; 3. Cardiovascular and Endovascular Surgery, San Giovanni Hospital, Rome, Italy

The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. This paper also includes accompanying moving images published at the following website: www.eurointervention.org

KEYWORDS Vulnerable plaque, intravascular imaging, acute coronary syndromes

Abstract Aims: To facilitate OCT images acquisition we developed a novel, simplified, non-occlusive technique based on manual infusion of a viscous isosmolar solution. The aims of the present study was to address the safety and efficacy of non-occlusive OCT images acquisition modality in a patient population with complex coronary lesions, and in various clinical scenarios. Methods and results: OCT assessment was performed with the LightLab OCT Imagewire™ in 64 patients. The imaging acquisition technique was aimed at target lesion and proximal and distal reference segments. OCT images were deemed of good quality if they allowed both an accurate measurement of luminal area and a qualitative classification of the superficial plaque components. In 60 patients (93.7%), the procedure was successful. The mean images acquisition time was 5.3±1.4 minutes. No major complications such as death, myocardial infarction or major arrhythmias were recorded. The average length of imaged segments was 28.6±6.1 mm and 95.1% of the imaged segments were deemed of sufficient quality to evaluate luminal area and plaque morphology (intra-observer and inter-observer variability 0.71, p

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