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在阻塞冠状动脉近端和捕获栓子物质期间Proxis系统标示逆向冠状动脉血流的安全性和有效性

Effectiveness and safety of the Proxis system in demonstrating retrograde coronary blood flow during proximal occlusion and in capturing embolic material
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摘要 The Feasibility And Safety Trial for its embolic protection device during transluminal intervention in coronary vessels: a European Registry (FASTER)was designed to demonstrate that (1) the Proxis embolic protection system can control anterograde flow and reverse blood flow in native coronary arteries and saphenous vein grafts; and (2) this system can capture embolic debris. Percutaneous coronary intervention on stenotic coronary lesions revolutionized treatment of coronary disease, but is associated with the risk of major adverse cardiac events. This prospective, nonrandomized, multicenter clinical feasibility and safety study enrolled 40 patients with 51 lesions at 4 centerswho underwent treatment of stenotic lesions with proximal emboli protection (Proxis system). Proxiswas successfully used 95%of the time, and embolic debris was qualitatively identified in all cases. Major adverse cardiac events occurred in 2 patients (5.0%): 1 late in-stent thrombosis resulting in death and 1 non-Q-wave infarction when a lesion was crossed before deployment of the Proxis system. Mean vessel occlusion time was 4.3±2.4 minutes. Native flow reversal was sufficient in 31 patients, with a mean aspirate volume of 11.8±6.5 ml. When the infusion catheter was used to augment reflow, mean occlusion time was 4.6 minutes. In conclusion, this trial is the first to demonstrate that retrograde blood flow can be achieved during proximal occlusion and that the Proxis system can be used safely during intervention of saphenous vein grafts and native coronary arterial lesions to capture embolic material. The Feasibility And Safety Trial for its embolic protection device during transluminal intervention in coronary vessels: a European Registry (FASTER)was designed to demonstrate that (1) the Proxis embolic protection system can control anterograde flow and reverse blood flow in native coronary arteries and saphenous vein grafts; and (2) this system can capture embolic debris. Percutaneous coronary intervention on stenotic coronary lesions revolutionized treatment of coronary disease, but is associated with the risk of major adverse cardiac events. This prospective, nonrandomized, multicenter clinical feasibility and safety study enrolled 40 patients with 51 lesions at 4 centerswho underwent treatment of stenotic lesions with proximal emboli protection (Proxis system). Proxiswas successfully used 95%of the time, and embolic debris was qualitatively identified in all cases. Major adverse cardiac events occurred in 2 patients (5.0%): 1 late in-stent thrombosis resulting in death and 1 non-Q-wave infarction when a lesion was crossed before deployment of the Proxis system. Mean vessel occlusion time was 4.3±2.4 minutes. Native flow reversal was sufficient in 31 patients, with a mean aspirate volume of 11.8±6.5 ml. When the infusion catheter was used to augment reflow, mean occlusion time was 4.6 minutes. In conclusion, this trial is the first to demonstrate that retrograde blood flow can be achieved during proximal occlusion and that the Proxis system can be used safely during intervention of saphenous vein grafts and native coronary arterial lesions to capture embolic material.
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