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Peak systolic velocity ratio derived from quantitative vessel analysis for restenosis after femoropopliteal intervention: a multidisciplinary review from Endovascular Asia.

Osami KawaradaKoji HozawaKan ZenHsuan-Li HuangSu Hong KimDonghoon ChoiKihyuk ParkKenichi KatoTaku KatoYoshinori TsubakimotoShigeo IchihashiNaoki FujimuraAkihiro HigashimoriTomoyasu SatoBryan Ping-Yen YanSkyi Yin-Chun PangChumpol WongwanitYew Pung LeongBenjamin ChuaRobbie K GeorgeI-Chih ChenJen-Kuang LeeChung-Ho HsuUei PuaYo IwataKojiro MikiKozo OkadaHideaki Obara
Published in: Cardiovascular intervention and therapeutics (2019)
With technological improvements in the endovascular armamentarium, there have been tremendous advances in catheter-based femoropopliteal artery intervention during the last decade. However, standardization of the methodology for assessing outcomes has been underappreciated, and unvalidated peak systolic velocity ratios (PSVRs) of 2.0, 2.4, and 2.5 on duplex ultrasonography have been arbitrarily but routinely used for assessing restenosis. Quantitative vessel analysis (QVA) is a widely accepted method to identify restenosis in a broad spectrum of cardiovascular interventions, and PSVR needs to be validated by QVA. This multidisciplinary review is intended to disseminate the importance of QVA and a validated PSVR based on QVA for binary restenosis in contemporary femoropopliteal intervention.
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