Abstract
The present study evaluated the application of quantitative coronary angiography (edge detection algorithm) for the analysis of coronary dissection lesions after balloon angioplasty. Acute and late results were obtained by the edge detection algorithm in 60 patients with 66 dissected lesions (NHLBI types B-C). The edge detection algorithm delineated the border of the true lumen in 32 lesions (group with automated analysis alone, 48.5%) and included the dissection cap in the analysis in 34 lesions in which manual editing was adjuncted (group with manual editing, 51.5%). In both groups, the minimal lumen diameter after balloon angioplasty obtained by initial automated analysis was correlated to that obtained at the 5.3-month follow-up similarly (r=0.554, p=0.0010 for the group with automated analysis alone and r=0.613, p=0.0001 after automated analysis for the group with manual editing). However, additional manual editing reduced the correlation coefficient (r=0.240, p=0.1707) in the latter group. Thus, in terms of predicting long-term patency, it is reasonable to let the edge detection algorithm decide the measurements in types B and C dissected lesions.
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Kondo, H., Ito, S., Shigeyama, J., Ito, O., Matsushita, T., Okamoto, M., … Itoh, M. (2000). Beneficial application of quantitative coronary angiography (edge detection algorithm) in analysis of dissected coronary arteries to predict long-term patency. Japanese Circulation Journal, 64(9), 667–671. https://doi.org/10.1253/jcj.64.667
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