Publication

Transesophageal Doppler echocardiographic detection of intramyocardial collateral flow to the right coronary artery and changes in the flow to the inferior left ventricular wall immediately after coronary artery bypass grafting

Journal Paper/Review - Dec 15, 2006

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Wang J, Filipovic M, Skarvan K, Michaux I, Schumann R, Buser P, Seeberger M. Transesophageal Doppler echocardiographic detection of intramyocardial collateral flow to the right coronary artery and changes in the flow to the inferior left ventricular wall immediately after coronary artery bypass grafting. The American journal of cardiology 2006; 98:1587-92.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
The American journal of cardiology 2006; 98
Publication Date
Dec 15, 2006
Issn Print
0002-9149
Pages
1587-92
Brief description/objective

This study examined the feasibility of Doppler transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) to detect collateral flow to the myocardium supplied by the right coronary artery (RCA) in the inferior left ventricular wall. Forty-four patients who underwent elective coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were prospectively studied. Presence of collateral flow to the RCA was diagnosed on preoperative angiography using the Rentrop score and by intraoperative Doppler TEE. Agreement of the 2 methods was analyzed by calculating the kappa coefficient. Collateral flow was present on preoperative angiography in 19 patients and absent in 25 patients. Intraoperative TEE detected collateral flow in the inferior wall in 15 patients (79%) with and 3 patients (12%) without angiographic collaterals, resulting in a kappa coefficient for agreement of 0.67 (95% confidence interval 0.45 to 0.90). Baseline collateral flow disappeared after CABG in 12 of 14 patients with grafting of the RCA but persisted in all patients without such grafting. Physiologic flow in the inferior wall was detected by TEE in a total of 27 patients at baseline and in 38 patients after CABG (p = 0.0018); its peak velocity increased after surgery only in the subgroup of patients with grafting of the RCA. In conclusion, these findings indicate that Doppler TEE may detect collateral flow in the inferior left ventricular wall, and that there are typical changes in collateral and physiologic flow after CABG.