Management of the thrombotic lesion

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Overview

Risk Stratification and Benefits of PCI

Preparation of the Patient for PCI

Equipment Used During PCI

Pharmacotherapy to Support PCI

Vascular Closure Devices

Recommendations for Perioperative Management–Timing of Elective Noncardiac Surgery in Patients Treated With PCI and DAPT

Post-PCI Management

Risk Reduction After PCI

Post-PCI follow up

Hybrid coronary revascularization

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PCI Complications

Factors Associated with Complications
Vessel Perforation
Dissection
Distal Embolization
No-reflow
Coronary Vasospasm
Abrupt Closure
Access Site Complications
Peri-procedure Bleeding
Restenosis
Renal Failure
Thrombocytopenia
Late Acquired Stent Malapposition
Loss of Side Branch
Multiple Complications

PCI in Specific Patients

Cardiogenic Shock
Left Main Coronary Artery Disease
Refractory Ventricular Arrhythmia
Severely Depressed Ventricular Function
Sole Remaining Conduit
Unprotected Left Main Patient
Adjuncts for High Risk PCI

PCI in Specific Lesion Types

Classification of the Lesion
The Calcified Lesion
The Ostial Lesion
The Angulated or Tortuous Lesion
The Bifurcation Lesion
The Long Lesion
The Bridge Lesion
Vasospasm
The Chronic Total Occlusion
The Left Internal Mammary Artery
Multivessel Disease
Distal Anastomotic Lesions
Left Main Intervention
The Thrombotic Lesion

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editors-In-Chief: Brian C. Bigelow, M.D.

Overview

The presence of angiographically apparent thrombus is associated with poorer outcomes in patients undergoing PCI. Thrombus often embolizes distally and causes no reflow and associated myonecrosis. There are two broad strategies to reduce thrombus burden: mechanical strategies and pharmacologic strategies.

Management of The Thrombotic Lesion

Differentiating Thrombus from Other Angiographic Abnormalities

Goals of Treatment

Goals in the management of the thrombotic lesion include:

Step-By-Step Strategy in the Management of the Thrombotic Lesion

  • The first strategy is to prevent the occurrence of thrombus through the use of upstream antiplatelet and antithrombotic pharmacotherapies including aspirin, thienopyridines, and glycoprotein 2b3a inhibition.
  • The second strategy is to mechanically aspirate thrombus.
  • The third strategy is to direct stent the lesion without pre-dilation to minimize distal embolization.
  • The fourth strategy is to utilize intracoronary fibrinolytic therapy to dissolve clot that is refractory to other forms of treatment and dissolve clot inside branches that may be accessible to mechanical devices.
  • Alternate / additional strategies include the use of distal protection and saphenous vein grafts to minimize distal embolization.

Pharmacologic Therapy

Antiplatelet Therapy

  • The incidence of thrombus on the coronary angiogram can be reduced by and complications of the PCI procedure can be reduced by upstream pharmacologic therapy with antiplatelet therapy including aspirin, platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor (GP IIb/IIIa) antagonists in patients who are troponin positive (abciximab, eptifibatide, tirofiban), and ADP receptor/P2Y12 inhibitors (plavix, ticagrelor, prasugrel)
  • Aspirin is a conventional therapy that reduces ischemic complications after PCI.
  • GP IIb/IIIa antagonists are used adjunctively to treat and prevent thrombus formation and decreases ischemic complications post-PCI in patients with angiographic evidence of or suspected thrombus. In patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI, GP IIb/IIIa antagonists have been shown to reduce mortality in meta-analyses. There is an ongoing debate as to the optimal timing of their administration (upstream vs in-lab administration).

Antithrombin Therapy

Thrombolytic Therapy

  • Thrombolytic Therapy: Urokinase (UK), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) for STEMI when other pharmacologic and mechanical treatments are not successful. Caution: intracoronary administration of fibrinolytic agents is an "off label" the use of these agents (this mode of administration is not been approved by the FDA, but fibrinolytic agents are an FDA approved drug). The total dose of tPA is 20 mg which is approximately the 1/5 of that generally used for systemic fibrinolysis. tPA can it be administered 2 mg at a time to evaluate its efficacy.

Mechanical Therapy

Thrombus Aspiration

  • Thrombus aspiration can be achieved with the Export, Pronto, and other devices
  • Thrombus aspiration is the preferred treatment and has been associated with improved myocardial perfusion and mortality.
  • Care should be exercised in very proximal lesions in the LAD and the circumflex, as the clot may embolize into the other artery.
  • After aspiration, direct stenting is associated with improved rates of recurrent MI in meta-analyses, improved myocardial perfusion, and improved ST segment resolution. Stenting reduces the risk of abrupt closure.

Direct Stenting

  • Direct placement of the stent without pre-dilation by a balloon has been associated with a reduction in myonecrosis in meta-analyses.

Distal Protection

  • Distal Protection can be achieved with the following devices (Percusurge guardwire, Triactive, Spider wire, Proxis), particularly in saphenous vein grafts
  • Occlusive (Percusurge guardwire, Triactive) and filter (Filterwire) methods may improve safety and efficacy of PCI in patients with thrombotic lesions in SVG; SAFER study of Percusurge device demonstrated lower rate of death/MI
  • Distal embolic protection has not shown to be efficacious in the setting of STEMI in native coronary arteries with either Percusurge (EMERALD trial[2]) or Filterwire (PROMISE trial[3]).

Rheolytic Thrombectomy

  • Rheolytic thrombectomy with Possis Angiojet was not found to have any benefit in the setting of STEMI in native coronary arteries in the AIMI trial. Infarct sizes were larger and mortality was higher.

Less Frequently Used Modalities

  • Directional Atherectomy
  • Transluminal Extraction Catheter (TEC)

Management of No Reflow

Distal embolization of thrombus often occurs, and you should be prepared to treat the patient for potential spasm or no-reflow with a calcium channel blocker, adenosine (100 mcg IC) or nitroprusside (100 mcg IC).

References

  1. White HD, Braunwald E, Murphy SA; et al. (2007). "Enoxaparin vs. unfractionated heparin with fibrinolysis for ST-elevation myocardial infarction in elderly and younger patients: results from ExTRACT-TIMI 25". Eur. Heart J. 28 (9): 1066–71. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehm081. PMID 17456482. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. Nikolsky E, Stone GW, Lee E; et al. (2009). "Correlations between epicardial flow, microvascular reperfusion, infarct size and clinical outcomes in patients with anterior versus non-anterior myocardial infarction treated with primary or rescue angioplasty: analysis from the EMERALD trial". EuroIntervention. 5 (4): 417–24. PMID 19755327. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  3. Gick M, Jander N, Bestehorn HP; et al. (2005). "Randomized evaluation of the effects of filter-based distal protection on myocardial perfusion and infarct size after primary percutaneous catheter intervention in myocardial infarction with and without ST-segment elevation". Circulation. 112 (10): 1462–9. doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.545178. PMID 16129793. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

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