Coronary artery disease
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Coronary artery disease · Jan 1999
Comparative StudyCoronary stenting for unstable angina: predictors of 30-day and long-term clinical outcome.
Unstable angina is usually caused by acute thrombosis superimposed on a fissured plaque. Coronary artery stenting has been shown to improve short- and long-term results of coronary angioplasty in mainly stable patients with one-vessel disease, but it is uncertain whether its use in an unstable clinical setting can be safe and useful. This study sought to evaluate the results of coronary stenting in unstable angina and to determine patient, lesion and procedure-related predictors of 30-day and long-term ischemic events. ⋯ This study demonstrates that, either electively or after failure of conventional angioplasty, coronary stenting represents an effective therapy for patients with unstable angina. In the same clinical setting, combined antiplatelet therapy is associated with a lower 30-day stent thrombosis rate than anticoagulant therapy. Bailout stenting, anticoagulant therapy, implantation of stents longer than 15 mm were shown to be predictors of 30-day ischemic events, whereas multivessel coronary artery disease and stent application with small balloon size were predictive of long-term ischemic events.