Publikation
Usefulness of myocardial blush grade early and late after primary coronary angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction in predicting left ventricular function
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review - 01.11.2003
Hoffmann Rainer, Haager Philipp K., Arning Jan, Christott Philipp, Radke Peter, Blindt Rüdiger, Ortlepp Jan, Lepper Wolfgang, Hanrath Peter
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PubMed
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Kurzbeschreibung/Zielsetzung
This study sought to analyze the evolution of myocardial perfusion during follow-up after primary angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and relate it to final left ventricular (LV) function. In 101 patients with a first AMI, angiographic myocardial blush grade (MBG) was analyzed immediately after intervention and at follow-up 7.5 +/- 5.6 months later. Cine ventriculography was performed at follow-up angiography to define LV function. Five patients had occluded stents or flow-limiting restenosis. In the remaining patients, myocardial perfusion at follow-up, as defined by MBG, was persistently abnormal in 19 patients (20%), had become normalized from previously abnormal MBG in 30 patients (31%), remained normal in 40 patients (42%), and deteriorated from normal to abnormal in 7 patients (7%). Patients with improvement of abnormal blush determined immediately after intervention to normal blush at follow-up (n = 30) compared with patients with persistently abnormal blush (n = 19) had a better LV ejection fraction at follow-up (53.7 +/- 11.1 vs. 37.4 +/- 9.7%, p <0.001). Evolution of MBG had a better predictive value for LV ejection fraction at follow-up than acute MBG only. Multivariate analysis proved evolution of MBG from AMI to follow-up to be an independent predictor of LV function (R(2) = 0.177, p <0.001) in addition to the initial size of jeopardized myocardium as defined by the sum of ST-segment elevation (R(2) = 0.138, p = 0.001) and infarct location (R(2) = 0.044, p = 0.033). In conclusion, tissue reperfusion after angioplasty for AMI is characterized by frequent improvement over time, as indicated by repeated MBG analysis. Patients with recovery of perfusion have better, final LV function.