| Literature DB >> 25848374 |
Mladen Tasic1, Miodrag J Sreckovic1, Nikola Jagic1, Vladimir Miloradovic1, Dusan Nikolic1.
Abstract
One of the rarest lesions is in-stent restenosis chronic total occlusion (CTO). Limited data suggest that the treatment success rate is dependent on the possibility to cross into the lumen of an occluded stent, and the decision about what technique to use varies by operator preference. The knuckle technique is used to create a deliberate dissection plane in various CTO techniques. A guide wire is pushed until a complex loop is formed and advanced through the lesion. In this report we present a case where a knuckle wire guided by intravascular ultrasound control is used to penetrate the distal cap in an in-stent restenosis CTO lesion.Entities:
Keywords: chronic total occlusion; in-stent restenosis; intravascular ultrasound; knuckle technique
Year: 2015 PMID: 25848374 PMCID: PMC4372635 DOI: 10.5114/pwki.2015.49188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Postepy Kardiol Interwencyjnej ISSN: 1734-9338 Impact factor: 1.426
Figure 1pPCI OM was done a year ago
Figure 2Occluded OM branch, visible stent struts
Figure 3Failure to cross CTO
Figure 4Passing of the wire after knuckling
Figure 5Wire in the distal segment
Figure 6IVUS of the segment distal to ISR-CTO lesion
Figure 7IVUS of the mid segment, at 3–5 o'clock position flap after the knuckled wire
Figure 8Most proximal part of the previously implanted stent with the mixed plaque and restenosis
Figure 9Final result
Figure 10Schematic of the knuckle wire positioning within ISR CTO lesion