4.3 Article

Success rate and influencing factors of a balloon-push technique: A new technique to remove side branch-jailed struts under three-dimensional optical coherence tomography guidance

Journal

CATHETERIZATION AND CARDIOVASCULAR INTERVENTIONS
Volume 101, Issue 3, Pages 528-535

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ccd.30548

Keywords

balloon-push technique; bifurcation stenting; three-dimensional optical coherence tomography

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The study investigated the success rate, patterns, and factors related to failure of jailed strut removal using the balloon-push technique. It was found that the technique was successful in removing jailed struts without causing severe stent deformation.
BackgroundKissing balloon inflation with distal guide wire recross can cause severe stent deformation depending on the stent link location with respect to the carina. The balloon-push technique, by which an inflated balloon is forced into the SB from the proximal main vessel (MV), is a feasible way to remove jailed struts without causing severe stent deformation. AimsWe investigated the procedural success rate, patterns of jailed strut removal at side branch (SB) orifices, factors related to failure of jailed strut removal, and follow-up angiogram results of the balloon-push technique. MethodsBetween September 2015 and December 2020, 51 bifurcation stenting cases in which the balloon-push technique was used were enrolled. Based on three-dimensional optical coherence tomography images, strut removal with 1 stent crown length was defined as successful. Strut removal patterns were classified into two types: parallel-slide type (stent struts shifted distally into the MV lumen without inversion) and under-carina type (stent struts shifted distally under the carina with strut inversion or strut slide). ResultsProcedural success was attained in 39 cases (success rate: 76.5%). Parallel-slide type and under-carina type occurred in 43% and 33% of cases, respectively. Factors related to failure were trifurcation lesions and a smaller pushed balloon-SB artery ratio compared with those in success cases (0.95 +/- 0.18 vs. 1.10 +/- 0.22, p = 0.032). Follow-up angiography was performed in 37 cases, and 2 cases had binary in-stent restenosis. ConclusionsRemoval of jailed struts with the balloon-push technique was feasible, without severe stent deformation, in bifurcation stentings.

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