Literature DB >> 24834405

Detailed cross-sectional study of 60 superficial femoral artery occlusions: morphological quantitative analysis can lead to a new classification.

Mickaël Ohana1, Soraya El Ghannudi1, Elie Girsowicz1, Anne Lejay1, Yannick Georg1, Fabien Thaveau1, Nabil Chakfe1, Catherine Roy1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Current clinical classification of superficial femoral artery (SFA) occlusions as defined by TASC II guidelines is limited to length and calcifications analysis on 2D angiograms, while state-of-the-art cross-sectional imaging like computed tomography angiography (CTA) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) provides much more detailed anatomical information than traditional invasive angiography: quantitative morphological analysis of these advanced imaging techniques could therefore be the basis of a refined classification. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Forty-six patients (65% men, 68±11.6 years) that underwent lower limb CTA were retrospectively included, totalizing 60 SFA occlusions. Lesions were classified as TASC II stage A in 3% of cases, stage B in 20%, stage C in 2% and stage D in 75%. For each pathological artery, curved multiplanar reconstructions following the occluded SFA course were used to measure the total length and the mean diameter of the occluded segment. Color-coded map provided an accurate estimation of calcifications' volume. Thirty-nine percent of the occlusions were total. Mean occluded segment length was 219±107 mm (range, 14-530 mm); mean occluded segment diameter was 6.1±1.6 mm (range, 3.4-10 mm); mean calcifications' volume in the occluded segment was 1,265±1,893 mm(3) (range, 0-8,815 mm(3)), corresponding to a percentage of 17.4%±20% (range, 0-88.7%). Shrinked occluded occlusions were defined by a mean diameter under 5 mm and heavily calcified occlusions by a mean percentage of calcifications above 4%. Use of these thresholds allowed the distinction of four groups of patients: heavily calcified occlusions with preserved caliber (56%), non-calcified occlusions with preserved caliber (19%), non-calcified occlusions with small caliber (15%) and heavily calcified occlusions with small caliber (10%).
CONCLUSIONS: SFA OCCLUSIONS ARE DISPARATE: this simple morphological study points out TASC II classification weaknesses for SFA occlusions, as quantitative cross-sectional imaging analysis with measurement of mean occluded diameter and percentage of calcifications can refine it. This could be particularly useful in the management of TASC II type D lesions, for which new endovascular revascularization techniques are arising, and where a CTA or MRA-based morphological classification could provide support in choosing between them. KEYWORDS: Computer-assisted image processing; femoral artery; multidetector computed tomography; magnetic resonance angiography (MRA); peripheral arterial disease.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 24834405      PMCID: PMC3996231          DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2223-3652.2014.01.01

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Diagn Ther        ISSN: 2223-3652


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8.  Contemporary outcomes after superficial femoral artery angioplasty and stenting: the influence of TASC classification and runoff score.

Authors:  Daniel M Ihnat; Son T Duong; Zachary C Taylor; Luis R Leon; Joseph L Mills; Kaoru R Goshima; Jose A Echeverri; Bulent Arslan
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