Mechanisms of Medial Wall Thinning in Chronic Total Occlusion
Chronic total occlusion (CTO) involves the complete blockage of a coronary artery, which restricts blood flow to the heart and can reduce exercise capacity, lead to heart failure, and result in poor prognosis. Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is one treatment option. However, its success rate for treating CTO is lower, and incidents of complication are higher compared with other heart conditions. Recent PCI techniques involve the coronary medial wall, but little is known about the coronary media in CTO lesions. In this study, scientists analyzed 2,586 sections taken from arteries with and without evidence of CTO (54 patients each) to determine how medial wall thinning might affect PCI as a treatment for CTO. They discovered that subjects with CTO had lower medial thickness than those with non-coronary-related death, and CTO lesions had thinner medial walls compared with those with lower luminal narrowing.
Read more about the study here, in a paper published by JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions.