{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: A case report on intravascular lithotripsy to facilitate retrograde wire passage from the subintimal to the luminal space in a calcified chronic total occlusion. {Author}: Werner GS;Yaginuma K; {Journal}: Eur Heart J Case Rep {Volume}: 7 {Issue}: 11 {Year}: 2023 Nov 暂无{DOI}: 10.1093/ehjcr/ytad541 {Abstract}: UNASSIGNED: Severe calcifications are a major reason for failures in chronic total coronary occlusions, as they can obstruct the wire passage both in the antegrade and retrograde technique.
UNASSIGNED: The proximal occlusion of the left anterior descending artery in a 75-year-old man presented with a completely concentric calcified ring all along the segment proximal to the occlusion. The antegrade wire could not pass the calcified occlusion, and in a retrograde approach via the right posterior descending artery the retrograde wire was not able to enter the lumen from a subintimal position outside of the calcified ring. Intravascular lithoplasty in the proximal segment led to a crack in this ring to enable the same retrograde wire now to pass into the true lumen with then successful conclusion of the case. Intravascular ultrasound demonstrated the modification of the calcified ring and the passage of the wire with only a very short subintimal pathway.
UNASSIGNED: Intravascular lithoplasty is a new option to modify severely calcified vessel segments to facilitate the reverse controlled antegrade and retrograde tracking approach. In the present case, this helped to avoid a long subintimal pathway and preserved the vessel anatomy.