Coronary lesions of intermediate severity, defined as 50%-70% luminal diameter narrowing by visualestimation at angiography, are frequently encountered in patients with stable or unstable coronary artery disease. Clin...Coronary lesions of intermediate severity, defined as 50%-70% luminal diameter narrowing by visualestimation at angiography, are frequently encountered in patients with stable or unstable coronary artery disease. Clinical decision making for patients with intermediate coronary stenosis is still challenging, but may be facilitated by assessing the morphology and physiological significance of these lesions.1 It is clear that angiographic stenosis is a highly unreliable surrogate for myocardial ischemia, as a significant proportion of anatomically high-grade lesions do not cause ischemia. Conversely, even for anatomically mild coronary lesions, a non-negligible rate of myocardial ischemia is consistently noted. Because the physiological significance of a lesion is mainly determined by both the severity of a stenosis and the amount of myocardium supplied, coronary angiography alone does not accurately predict the functional significance of intermediate coronary lesions.2,3展开更多
文摘Coronary lesions of intermediate severity, defined as 50%-70% luminal diameter narrowing by visualestimation at angiography, are frequently encountered in patients with stable or unstable coronary artery disease. Clinical decision making for patients with intermediate coronary stenosis is still challenging, but may be facilitated by assessing the morphology and physiological significance of these lesions.1 It is clear that angiographic stenosis is a highly unreliable surrogate for myocardial ischemia, as a significant proportion of anatomically high-grade lesions do not cause ischemia. Conversely, even for anatomically mild coronary lesions, a non-negligible rate of myocardial ischemia is consistently noted. Because the physiological significance of a lesion is mainly determined by both the severity of a stenosis and the amount of myocardium supplied, coronary angiography alone does not accurately predict the functional significance of intermediate coronary lesions.2,3