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ith the tract's putative functional implications in high-order motor and behavioral processes and can potentially inform current surgical practice in the fields of neuro-oncology and functional neurosurgery.Coronary-cameral fistula (CCF) is a rare congenital communication between a coronary artery and a cardiac chamber or a great vessel. Most patients are asymptomatic and these lesions are incidentally detected during coronary angiography, with the reported incidence being up to 0.2%. The most frequent draining sites are right ventricle, right atrium, and pulmonary arteries, with less frequent drainage to the left side of the heart. The majority of CCFs are hemodynamically inconsequential and do not require treatment. However, when large, these lesions can cause myocardial ischemia by causing coronary steal or high-output heart failure, and should be treated. Treatment modalities include transcatheter closure with embolic agents (microcoil or gelfoam) and surgical ligation. Choice of therapy is governed by size of the CCF, tortuosity of the feeder channel, size of the communication to prevent embolization, and concomitant coronary artery disease.The inability to advance the dedicated wire of the transradial sheath in a radial artery with a good pulsatile blood flow is a very rare event. In this case, the advancement of a high-performance 0.014 inch coronary wire is the only option to gain the vessel. Then, if the transradial sheath is stuck in the proximal radial artery wall, balloon angioplasty of the radial artery may allow successful reinsertion of the transradial sheath. This technique allows the preservation of radial artery access, avoiding a shift to an alternative arterial approach.Percutaneous coronary intervention in STEMI patients may be complicated by the presence of calcium. The Shockwave IVL technique seems to be a safe and useful option, even in STEMI cases, to achieve procedural success. Nevertheless, extra support techniques may be needed in order to deliver the Shockwave balloon.The adoption of distal transradial access (TRA) as default approach for coronary angiography and interventions was recently published. As a refinement of conventional (proximal) TRA, this technique has advantages in terms of patient and operator comfort and risk of radial artery occlusion. We report herein a very challenging case of coronary angiography followed by complex percutaneous coronary intervention via right distal TRA, with aberrant (lusoria) subclavian artery, in the setting of non-ST segment elevation acute myocardial infarction complicated by refractory electrical storm.

Primary coronary slow-flow phenomenon (CSFP) is defined as delayed opacification of contrast media in at least 1 coronary vessel in the absence of obstructive epicardial coronary artery disease (CAD) during coronary angiography. Epicardial fat tissue (EFT) surrounding coronary vessels provides paracrine effects. Released cytokines diffusing in the vessel wall may induce local inflammatory reactions that potentially result in endothelial dysfunction. The latter is thought to be the underlying cause of primary CSFP. However, to date, there are no data describing an association between EFT and CSFP. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to compare EFT thickness, clinical parameters, and outcomes in patients with and without CSFP.

Coronary angiograms with primary CSFP obtained during a 10-year period were included in the analysis. EFT was measured in the 2-dimensional echocardiographic records. Clinical and diagnostic data were compared with non-CSFP patients who were matched for age, sex, and body masss to have no impact on long-term outcomes. Further studies are needed to elucidate the role of EFT in CSFP.

Complex chronic total occlusion (CTO) cases often require dual access. Evidence suggests that radial access is associated with lower success rates in complex CTOs. Our primary outcome was to determine efficacy of biradial access compared with femoral access.

This was a retrospective, single-center, observational study. Patients who underwent dual-access CTO percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) between January 2014 and January 2018 were enrolled. They were separated into biradial and femoral access groups. Data on demographics, comorbidities, complications, lesion characteristics, radiation, and contrast dose were collected. Standard univariate analyses were performed to identify predictors for revascularization failure.

There were 150 cases identified, 109 biradial and 41 femoral access. There was no significant difference in success rate between the radial and femoral groups (87% vs 78%, respectively; P=.17). The average J-CTO score was 3 vs 4 (P=.04). Matched cohort analysis showed equivalent success rates (80.6% vs 75.0%, respectively; P=.53). Elevated body mass index, poor renal function, previous coronary artery bypass grafting, higher J-CTO, CTO >20 mm, presence of >45° bend within the diseased segment, and absence of collaterals were associated with CTO-PCI failure. Biradial access had shorter procedures (111 minutes vs 147 minutes; P<.01), reduced radiation exposure (dose-area product, 17,452 cGy•cm² vs 23,651 cGy•cm²; P<.01), less contrast (237 mL vs 315 mL; P=.11) and reduced hospital stay (0.38 ± 1.3 days vs 0.61 ± 1.1 days; P=.02).

With shorter length of stay, fewer complications, and less radiation used in radial cases, we suggest biradial access is an effective and safe alternative in CTO-PCI. Prospective studies are needed to determine superiority.

With shorter length of stay, fewer complications, and less radiation used in radial cases, we suggest biradial access is an effective and safe alternative in CTO-PCI. Prospective studies are needed to determine superiority.

Invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) is considered the gold standard to evaluate coronary artery flow. Pilaralisib cell line Stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (sCMR) is an emerging non-invasive tool to evaluate myocardial perfusion in children. We sought to compare sCMR with FFR to determine impaired intracoronary flow in children with anomalous aortic origin of a coronary artery (AAOCA) and/or myocardial bridge (MB) who presented concern for myocardial ischemia.

From December 2012 to May 2019, AAOCA and/or MB patients (<20 years old) were prospectively enrolled and underwent sCMR and FFR. Abnormal sCMR included perfusion/regional wall-motion abnormality in the involved coronary distribution. FFR was performed at baseline and with dobutamine/regadenoson and considered abnormal if <0.8 in the affected coronary segment.

Of 376 patients evaluated, a total of 19 (age range, 0.2-17 years) underwent 24 sets of sCMR and FFR studies, with 5 repeat studies following intervention. Types of anomalies included 6 isolated MB/normal CA origins, 5 single CAs, 5 left AAOCAs, and 3 right AAOCAs.

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