BACKGROUND: The relationship of the ischemic time to primary angioplasty and the quality of myocardial reperfusion according to infarcted territory among patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is unclear. METHODS: This study consisted of 140 patients with STEMI within 12 h from the symptom onset and undergoing a primary angioplasty from the Protection of Distal Embolization in High-Risk Patients with Acute ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction Trial. ST-segment resolution (STR) at 60 min was analyzed by an independent corelab using continuous ST monitoring. Patients were divided according to anterior (n=74) and nonanterior (n=64) locations and according to ischemic time in quartiles (<90, 90-148, 148-241, and 241-635 min). RESULTS: Although there was no significant decrement in the extent of STR with the ischemic time in the entire population (74, 51, 72, and 51%, respectively, P=not significant), patients with anterior location have a significant reduction in the extent of STR after 90 min compared with those coming after 90 min (70.6 vs. 29.2% of complete STR, P=0.003, respectively). CONCLUSION: Patients with anterior STEMI seem to have a stronger impact of ischemic time on the quality of myocardial reperfusion compared with patients with nonanterior location.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: The relationship of the ischemic time to primary angioplasty and the quality of myocardial reperfusion according to infarcted territory among patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is unclear. METHODS: This study consisted of 140 patients with STEMI within 12 h from the symptom onset and undergoing a primary angioplasty from the Protection of Distal Embolization in High-Risk Patients with Acute ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction Trial. ST-segment resolution (STR) at 60 min was analyzed by an independent corelab using continuous ST monitoring. Patients were divided according to anterior (n=74) and nonanterior (n=64) locations and according to ischemic time in quartiles (<90, 90-148, 148-241, and 241-635 min). RESULTS: Although there was no significant decrement in the extent of STR with the ischemic time in the entire population (74, 51, 72, and 51%, respectively, P=not significant), patients with anterior location have a significant reduction in the extent of STR after 90 min compared with those coming after 90 min (70.6 vs. 29.2% of complete STR, P=0.003, respectively). CONCLUSION:Patients with anterior STEMI seem to have a stronger impact of ischemic time on the quality of myocardial reperfusion compared with patients with nonanterior location.
Authors: B Sarli; M Akpek; A O Baktir; O Sahin; H Saglam; H Arinc; H Odabasi; S Dogan; S Kurtul; Y Dogan; M G Kaya Journal: Herz Date: 2014-01-19 Impact factor: 1.443