Lucas Su Chen, Gabriel Koh, Yak-Nam Wang, Ga Won Kim, Zorawar Singh, Adrienne Lehnert, Robert Miyaoka, Hitinder S Gurm, Adam D Maxwell
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Fracture and Fragmentation of Vascular Calcifications by Focused Ultrasound.
Peripheral artery disease results in ischemia necessitating interventions such as balloon angioplasty. However, calcified lesions resist balloon and stent expansion, leading to poor outcomes. We hypothesized that focused ultrasound can fracture vascular calcifications and enable balloon angioplasty. In a first experiment, focused ultrasound was applied to ex vivo human calcified plaque specimens to determine its effects based on micro-CT imaging. In a second experiment, ultrasound was applied to an in vitro phantom to evaluate whether the effects enable balloon expansion. Fractures, thinning, and disintegration of calcified sections were observed in 15 of 18 treated human plaque samples. Minor mechanical disruption to soft plaque was found in 33% of samples. In tissue phantoms, n = 10/10 samples were successfully expanded by a water-filled angioplasty balloon with ultrasound applied prior to or during expansion. No controls (n = 0/10) were expanded. These results indicate focused-ultrasound plaque fracture is feasible and may enhance balloon angioplasty.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research (JCTR) is a premier journal in cardiovascular translational research.
JCTR is the journal of choice for authors seeking the broadest audience for emerging technologies, therapies and diagnostics, pre-clinical research, and first-in-man clinical trials.
JCTR''s intent is to provide a forum for critical evaluation of the novel cardiovascular science, to showcase important and clinically relevant aspects of the new research, as well as to discuss the impediments that may need to be overcome during the translation to patient care.