Angiography-based coronary microvascular assessment with and without intracoronary pressure measurements: a systematic review.
Michael KestAndrás ÁgostonGábor Tamás SzabóAttila KissÁron ÜvegesDániel CzurigaAndrás KomócsiIstván HizohZsolt KoszegiPublished in: Clinical research in cardiology : official journal of the German Cardiac Society (2023)
Our findings suggest that combined angiography- and pressure-based methods provide a more reliable assessment of microvascular resistance compared to methods relying solely on angiography. Central illustration. Comparative assessment of image-based methods quantifying microvascular resistance with and without intracoronary pressure measurements. Angiography-based methods rely on angiography alone to calculate the microvascular resistance by utilizing angiographic frame counting to extrapolate coronary flow (Q) and subsequently deriving distal coronary pressure using fluid dynamic equations. Combined angiography- and pressure-based methods utilize invasive intracoronary pressure gradients measured during rest and maximal vasodilation to determine coronary flow in their calculation of microvascular resistance. The combined methods showed more acceptable levels of agreement with their reference methods compared to angiography-based methods alone.