Does intravascular ultrasonography (IVUS) improve the evaluation and optimization of coronary angioplasty and stenting compared to angiography?
IVUS provides superior visualization of the vessel wall compared to angiography, allowing for better assessment of plaque burden, optimization of stent deployment, and potentially reducing restenosis rates.
The main advantage of intravascular ultrasonography (IVUS) over angiography in assessing the effect of coronary interventions is the ability of IVUS to directly visualize the vessel wall. IVUS often reveals a high residual plaque burden after angiographically successful angioplasty, and this can motivate the operator to use additional, more aggressive measures in an attempt to increase lumen dimensions. Studies using IVUS imaging before and after balloon angioplasty have shown that luminal gain after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) results from a combination of plaque reduction and vessel wall stretch. Minimal luminal area and residual area stenosis after PTCA and stent deployment, as measured by IVUS, have been shown to be predictors of restenosis. IVUS studies have pointed to vessel shrinkage, not intimal hyperplasia, as the main mechanism of restenosis after PTCA. IVUS guidance of stent deployment has often revealed inadequate stent expansion despite optimal results on angiography, leading to high-pressure stent deployment with significant additional luminal gain. Restenosis rates may be lower with IVUS-guided stent deployment.
Fuessl et al. (Mon,) studied this question.