Читать книгу Interventional Cardiology - Группа авторов - Страница 234
Catheter preparation, calibration, image acquisition and fluoroscopic co‐localization
ОглавлениеPurging with contrast is an essential step of catheter preparation. Because of the difficulty to inject the highly viscous contrast through the long thin hole around the probe, a high‐pressure syringe is provided. After connection and testing, calibration is the next essential step and must be performed when the catheter is already inserted at the start‐point of the pullback to correct for changes in length of the optic fiber caused by bending of the imaging wire and proximity to the vessel wall [6]. The rapid OCT pullback should be started only after optimal blood clearance that can be achieved via a manual injection through the guiding catheter or, better, using an automatic injector (ACIST Bracco, Italy; Medrad, Bayer, Germany). While the injection rate is similar or slightly higher than the customary 3 mL/s for the RCA and 4 mL/s for the LCA, the contrast volume should be increased to 15–20 mL to ensure full clearance throughout the pullback. High volume users mainly prefer manual selection of the pullback to avoid a too early start often observed, relying on the automatic system triggering. The use of contrast to replace blood is very efficient because it avoids swirling of blood when less viscous fluids are used but is contraindicated in patients with severe renal insufficiency. In most patients it is possible to obtain all the required information performing 2–3 imaging runs (before stenting and after stent optimization) sparing contrast in avoiding multiple views not required when the full three‐dimensional anatomy of the vessel can be clarified with OCT, especially in combination with coregistration that also eliminates the need of injections for balloon and stent positioning. The substitution of contrast with dextran or saline may offer a future solution for all these problems.
If an angiographic acquisition is performed throughout the pullback, efficient built‐in software is available to follow the imaging tip during pullback and allow accurate matching of OCT with angiographic images. This facilitates accurate ballon/stent positioning during fluoroscopy at the desired sites. The AptiVue software upgrade has new features that will assist in achieving optimization targets as it was designed to follow the ILUMIEN IV protocol (NCT03507777). The software permits automated and rapid determination of stent expansion and apposition. The stent expansion analysis offers two modes: dual and tapered. In both, the stent is automatically detected, rendered, and divided in half to account for natural vessel tapering. It is important to note that all areas should be checked and manually corrected by the operator, when needed, prior to any treatment.