Literature DB >> 21744151

The diagnostic value of intracoronary optical coherence tomography.

E Regar1, J Ligthart, N Bruining, G van Soest.   

Abstract

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a novel light-based imaging modality for application in the coronary circulation. Compared to conventional intravascular ultrasound, OCT has a ten-fold higher image resolution. This advantage has seen OCT successfully applied in the assessment of atherosclerotic plaque, stent apposition, and tissue coverage, heralding a new era in intravascular coronary imaging. The present article discusses the diagnostic value of OCT, both in cardiovascular research as well as in potential clinical application.The unparalleled high image resolution and strong contrast between the coronary lumen and the vessel wall structure enable fast and reliable image interpretation. OCT makes it possible to visualize the presence of atherosclerotic plaque in order to characterize the structure and extent of coronary plaque and to quantify lumen dimensions, as well as the extent of lumen narrowing, in unprecedented detail. Based on optical properties, OCT is able to distinguish different tissue types, such as fibrous, lipid-rich, necrotic, or calcified tissue. Furthermore, OCT is able to cover the visualization of a variety of features of atherosclerotic plaques that have been associated with rapid lesion progression and clinical events, such as thin cap fibroatheroma, fibrous cap thickness, dense macrophage infiltration, and thrombus formation. These unique features allow the use of OCT to assess patients with acute coronary syndrome and to study the dynamic nature of coronary atherosclerosis in vivo and over time. This permits new insights into plaque progression, regression, and rupture, as well as the study of effects of therapies aimed at modulating these developments.Today's OCT technology allows high detail resolution as well as fast and safe clinical image acquisition. These unique features have established OCT as the gold standard for the assessment of coronary stents. This technique makes it possible to study stent expansion, peri-procedural vessel trauma, and the interaction of the stent with the vessel wall down to the level of individual stent struts, both acutely as well as in the long term, where it is has proven extremely sensitive to the detection of even minor amounts of tissue coverage. These qualities render OCT indispensable to addressing vexing clinical questions such as the relationship of drug-eluting stent deployment, vascular healing, the true time course of endothelial stent coverage, and late stent thrombosis. This may also better guide the optimal duration of dual anti-platelet therapy that currently remains unclear and relatively empirical.In the future, OCT might emerge, parallel to its undisputed position in research, as the tool of choice in all clinical scenarios where angiography is limited by its nature as a two-dimensional luminogram.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21744151     DOI: 10.1007/s00059-011-3487-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Herz        ISSN: 0340-9937            Impact factor:   1.443


  50 in total

1.  Second-generation optical coherence tomography in clinical practice. High-speed data acquisition is highly reproducible in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention.

Authors:  Nieves Gonzalo; Guillermo J Tearney; Patrick W Serruys; Gijs van Soest; Takayuki Okamura; Héctor M García-García; Robert Jan van Geuns; Martin van der Ent; Jurgen Ligthart; Brett E Bouma; Evelyn Regar
Journal:  Rev Esp Cardiol       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 4.753

2.  Reproducibility of coronary Fourier domain optical coherence tomography: quantitative analysis of in vivo stented coronary arteries using three different software packages.

Authors:  Takayuki Okamura; Nieves Gonzalo; Juan Luis Gutiérrez-Chico; Patrick W Serruys; Nico Bruining; Sebastiaan de Winter; Jouke Dijkstra; Koen H Commossaris; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Gijs van Soest; Jurgen Ligthart; Evelyn Regar
Journal:  EuroIntervention       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 6.534

3.  Characterization of plaque prolapse after drug-eluting stent implantation in diabetic patients: a three-dimensional volumetric intravascular ultrasound outcome study.

Authors:  Hideki Futamatsu; Manel Sabaté; Dominick J Angiolillo; Pilar Jimenez-Quevedo; Cecilia Corros; Kino Morikawa-Futamatsu; Fernando Alfonso; Julie Jiang; Pavel Cervinka; Rosana Hernandez-Antolin; Carlos Macaya; Theodore A Bass; Marco A Costa
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2006-08-28       Impact factor: 24.094

4.  Diagnostic accuracy of optical coherence tomography and integrated backscatter intravascular ultrasound images for tissue characterization of human coronary plaques.

Authors:  Masanori Kawasaki; Brett E Bouma; Jason Bressner; Stuart L Houser; Seemantini K Nadkarni; Briain D MacNeill; Ik-Kyung Jang; Hisayoshi Fujiwara; Guillermo J Tearney
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2006-06-09       Impact factor: 24.094

5.  Is pathologic intimal thickening the key to understanding early plaque progression in human atherosclerotic disease?

Authors:  Frank D Kolodgie; Allen P Burke; Gaku Nakazawa; Renu Virmani
Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 8.311

6.  Does underlying plaque morphology play a role in vessel healing after drug-eluting stent implantation?

Authors:  Aloke V Finn; Gaku Nakazawa; Elena Ladich; Frank D Kolodgie; Renu Virmani
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2008-07

7.  Witnessed coronary plaque rupture during cardiac catheterization.

Authors:  Nieves Gonzalo; Guillermo J Tearney; Gijs van Soest; Patrick Serruys; Héctor M Garcia-Garcia; Brett E Bouma; Evelyn Regar
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2011-04-02

8.  Assessment of culprit and remote coronary narrowings using optical coherence tomography with long-term outcomes.

Authors:  Peter Barlis; Patrick W Serruys; Nieves Gonzalo; Willem J van der Giessen; Peter J de Jaegere; Evelyn Regar
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2008-05-22       Impact factor: 2.778

9.  Frequency and spatial distribution of thin-cap fibroatheroma assessed by 3-vessel intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography: an ex vivo validation and an initial in vivo feasibility study.

Authors:  Teruyoshi Kume; Hiroyuki Okura; Ryotaro Yamada; Takahiro Kawamoto; Nozomi Watanabe; Yoji Neishi; Yoshito Sadahira; Takashi Akasaka; Kiyoshi Yoshida
Journal:  Circ J       Date:  2009-04-09       Impact factor: 2.993

10.  Measurement of collagen and smooth muscle cell content in atherosclerotic plaques using polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography.

Authors:  Seemantini K Nadkarni; Mark C Pierce; B Hyle Park; Johannes F de Boer; Peter Whittaker; Brett E Bouma; Jason E Bressner; Elkan Halpern; Stuart L Houser; Guillermo J Tearney
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2007-03-21       Impact factor: 24.094

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  8 in total

1.  Difference in neointimal coverage at chronic stage between bare metal stent and sirolimus-eluting stent evaluated at stent-strut level by optical coherence tomography.

Authors:  Shinichiro Ikuta; Kazuhiro Kobuke; Yoshitaka Iwanaga; Yoshifumi Nakauchi; Kenji Yamaji; Shunichi Miyazaki
Journal:  Heart Vessels       Date:  2013-06-21       Impact factor: 2.037

2.  Calibration of histological retina specimens after fixation in Margo's solution and paraffin embedding to in-vivo dimensions, using photography and optical coherence tomography.

Authors:  Stefan Koinzer; Sandra Bajorat; Carola Hesse; Amke Caliebe; Marco Bever; Ralf Brinkmann; Christoph Roecken; Johann Roider
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2013-09-14       Impact factor: 3.117

3.  Deep feature learning for automatic tissue classification of coronary artery using optical coherence tomography.

Authors:  Atefeh Abdolmanafi; Luc Duong; Nagib Dahdah; Farida Cheriet
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2017-01-30       Impact factor: 3.732

4.  Spontaneous coronary artery dissection mimicking coronary spasm diagnosed by intravascular ultrasonography.

Authors:  Hyemoon Chung; Sung-Joo Lee; Jong-Kwan Park; In Suk Choi; Ho Yeon Won; Sohee Kim; Jung-Joon Cha; Byoung Kwon Lee
Journal:  Korean Circ J       Date:  2013-07-31       Impact factor: 3.243

5.  Effect of temperature and fixation on the optical properties of atherosclerotic tissue: a validation study of an ex-vivo whole heart cadaveric model.

Authors:  Muthukaruppan Gnanadesigan; Gijs van Soest; Stephen White; Simon Scoltock; Giovanni J Ughi; Andreas Baumbach; Antonius Fw van der Steen; Evelyn Regar; Thomas W Johnson
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2014-03-03       Impact factor: 3.732

6.  A novel model of atherosclerosis in rabbits using injury to arterial walls induced by ferric chloride as evaluated by optical coherence tomography as well as intravascular ultrasound and histology.

Authors:  Jinwei Tian; Sining Hu; Yanli Sun; Xiang Ban; Huai Yu; Nana Dong; Jian Wu; Bo Yu
Journal:  J Biomed Biotechnol       Date:  2012-05-14

7.  Reconstruction of stented coronary arteries from optical coherence tomography images: Feasibility, validation, and repeatability of a segmentation method.

Authors:  Claudio Chiastra; Eros Montin; Marco Bologna; Susanna Migliori; Cristina Aurigemma; Francesco Burzotta; Simona Celi; Gabriele Dubini; Francesco Migliavacca; Luca Mainardi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-06-02       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Optical coherence tomography attenuation imaging for lipid core detection: an ex-vivo validation study.

Authors:  Muthukaruppan Gnanadesigan; Ali S Hussain; Stephen White; Simon Scoltock; Andreas Baumbach; Antonius F W van der Steen; Evelyn Regar; Thomas W Johnson; Gijs van Soest
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2016-09-12       Impact factor: 2.357

  8 in total

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