Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Young-Hak Kim, Duk‐Woo Park, Seung‐Whan Lee, S. Yun, Cheol-Whan Lee, M. Hong, Seong-Wook Park, K. Seung, H. Gwon, M. Jeong, Y. Jang, H. Kim, I. Seong, H. Park, T. Ahn, I. Chae, S. Tahk, W. Chung, Seung‐Jung Park (2009)
Long-Term Safety and Effectiveness of Unprotected Left Main Coronary Stenting With Drug-Eluting Stents Compared With Bare-Metal StentsCirculation, 120
D. Rizik, Kevin Klassen, J. Hermiller (2008)
Bifurcation coronary artery disease: current techniques and future directions (part 2).The Journal of invasive cardiology, 20 3
D. Rizik, Kevin Klassen, J. Hermiller (2008)
Bifurcation coronary artery disease: current techniques and future directions (part 1).The Journal of invasive cardiology, 20 2
D. Carrié, H. Eltchaninoff, T. Lefévre, M. Silvestri, G. Lévy, E. Maupas, P. Brunel, J. Fajadet, H. Breton, M. Gilard, D. Blanchard, B. Glatt (2009)
Twelve month clinical and angiographic outcome after stenting of unprotected left main coronary artery stenosis with paclitaxel-eluting stents--results of the multicentre FRIEND registry.EuroIntervention : journal of EuroPCR in collaboration with the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology, 4 4
B. Vaquerizo, T. Lefévre, O. Darremont, M. Silvestri, Y. Louvard, J. Leymarie, P. Garot, H. Routledge, F. Marco, T. Unterseeh, M. Zwahlen, M. Morice (2009)
Unprotected Left Main Stenting in the Real World: Two-Year Outcomes of the French Left Main Taxus RegistryCirculation, 119
R. Costa, G. Mintz, S. Carlier, A. Lansky, I. Moussa, K. Fujii, Hideo Takebayashi, T. Yasuda, J. Costa, Y. Tsuchiya, L. Jensen, Ecaterina Cristea, R. Mehran, G. Dangas, S. Iyer, M. Collins, E. Kreps, A. Colombo, G. Stone, M. Leon, J. Moses (2005)
Bifurcation coronary lesions treated with the "crush" technique: an intravascular ultrasound analysis.Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 46 4
L. Luca, L. Altamura, P. Corvo, G. Persio, A. Ghini, A. Petrolini, C. Aurigemma, F. Tomai (2011)
CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE Original Studies Long-Term Outcome of Provisional Side-Branch T-Stenting for the Treatment of Unprotected Distal Left Main Coronary Artery Disease
Rizik (2010)
Dedicated bifurcation devicesRev Cardiovasc Med, 11
Miroslaw Ferenc, M. Gick, Rolf-Peter Kienzle, H. Bestehorn, K. Werner, T. Comberg, P. Kuebler, H. Büttner, F. Neumann (2008)
Randomized trial on routine vs. provisional T-stenting in the treatment of de novo coronary bifurcation lesionsEuropean Heart Journal, 29
Jassim Suwaidi, W. Yeh, H. Cohen, K. Detre, David Williams, D. Holmes (2001)
Immediate and one-year outcome in patients with coronary bifurcation lesions in the modern era (NHLBI dynamic registry).The American journal of cardiology, 87 10
H. Bezerra, E. Perin, P. Berger, P. Block, S. Ramee, S. Katz, Mirle Kellet, E. Dippel, G. Schaer, Suzanne Britto, Sidney Cohen, M. Costa (2010)
Outcomes of unselected recipients of sirolimus-eluting stents: the Cypher stent U.S. post-marketing surveillance registry.The Journal of invasive cardiology, 22 2
A. Hakeem, Faisal Khan, Sabha Bhatti, Zainab Samad, M. Effat, M. Eckman, T. Helmy (2009)
Provisional vs. complex stenting strategy for coronary bifurcation lesions: meta-analysis of randomized trials.The Journal of invasive cardiology, 21 11
P. Brunel, T. Lefévre, O. Darremont, Y. Louvard (2006)
Provisional T‐stenting and kissing balloon in the treatment of coronary bifurcation lesions: Results of the French multicenter “TULIPE” studyCatheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions, 68
Feng Zhang, Lili Dong, Junbo Ge (2009)
Simple versus complex stenting strategy for coronary artery bifurcation lesions in the drug-eluting stent era: a meta-analysis of randomised trialsHeart, 95
Hermiller (2010)
Contemporary bifurcation treatment strategies: The role of currently available slotted tube stentsRev Cardiovasc Med, 11
D. Rizik, Joseph Klag, A. Tenaglia, Thomas Hatten, M. Barnhart, B. Warnack (2009)
Evaluation of a bifurcation drug-eluting stent system versus provisional T-stenting in a perfused synthetic coronary artery model.Journal of interventional cardiology, 22 6
T. Lefévre, J. Ormiston, G. Guagliumi, H. Schultheiss, L. Quilliet, B. Reimers, P. Brunel, W. Wijns, H. Buettner, F. Hartmann, S. Veldhof, Karin Miquel, Xiaolu Su, W. Giessen (2005)
The Frontier stent registry: safety and feasibility of a novel dedicated stent for the treatment of bifurcation coronary artery lesions.Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 46 4
P. Garot, T. Lefévre, M. Savage, Y. Louvard, W. Bamlet, J. Willerson, M. Morice, D. Holmes (2005)
Nine-month outcome of patients treated by percutaneous coronary interventions for bifurcation lesions in the recent era: a report from the Prevention of Restenosis with Tranilast and its Outcomes (PRESTO) trial.Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 46 4
Duk‐Woo Park, Young-Hak Kim, S. Yun, Jong-Young Lee, Won-Jang Kim, Soo-Jin Kang, Seung‐Whan Lee, Cheol-Whan Lee, Jae‐Joong Kim, S. Choo, C. Chung, J. Lee, Seong-Wook Park, Seung‐Jung Park (2010)
Clinical ResearchInterventional CardiologyLong-Term Outcomes After Stenting Versus Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting for Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery Disease: 10-Year Results of Bare-Metal Stents and 5-Year Results of Drug-Eluting Stents From the ASAN–MAIN (ASAN Medical Center–Left MAIN RevasJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 56
P. Buszman, Stefan Kiesz, A. Bochenek, Ewa Peszek-Przybyła, I. Szkróbka, Marcin Dębiński, B. Białkowska, D. Dudek, A. Gruszka, A. Zurakowski, K. Milewski, M. Wilczyński, L. Rzeszutko, P. Buszman, J. Szymszal, Jack Martin, M. Tendera (2008)
Acute and late outcomes of unprotected left main stenting in comparison with surgical revascularization.Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 51 5
G. Athappan, Thirumalaikolundiusubramanian Ponniah, L. Jeyaseelan (2010)
True coronary bifurcation lesions: meta-analysis and review of literatureJournal of Cardiovascular Medicine, 11
Y. Louvard, T. Lefévre, M. Morice (2004)
Percutaneous coronary intervention for bifurcation coronary diseaseHeart, 90
De Luca (2011)
Long-term outcome of provisional side-branch T-stenting for the treatment of unprotected distal left main coronary artery diseaseCatheter Cardiovasc Interv, 77
A. Colombo, J. Moses, M. Morice, J. Ludwig, D. Holmes, V. Spanos, Y. Louvard, Benny Desmedt, C. Mario, M. Leon (2004)
Randomized Study to Evaluate Sirolimus-Eluting Stents Implanted at Coronary Bifurcation LesionsCirculation: Journal of the American Heart Association, 109
K. Seung, Duk‐Woo Park, Young-Hak Kim, Seung‐Whan Lee, Cheol-Whan Lee, M. Hong, Seong-Wook Park, S. Yun, H. Gwon, M. Jeong, Y. Jang, Hyo‐Soo Kim, P. Kim, I. Seong, H. Park, T. Ahn, I. Chae, S. Tahk, W. Chung, Seung‐Jung Park (2008)
Stents versus coronary-artery bypass grafting for left main coronary artery disease.The New England journal of medicine, 358 17
Shao‐Liang Chen, T. Santoso, Junjie Zhang, F. Ye, Ya‐wei Xu, Q. Fu, J. Kan, Chitprapai Paiboon, Yong Zhou, Shi-Qing Ding, T. Kwan (2011)
A randomized clinical study comparing double kissing crush with provisional stenting for treatment of coronary bifurcation lesions: results from the DKCRUSH-II (Double Kissing Crush versus Provisional Stenting Technique for Treatment of Coronary Bifurcation Lesions) trial.Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 57 8
B. Koo, K. Waseda, Hyun-Jae Kang, Hyo‐Soo Kim, C. Nam, S. Hur, Jung‐Sun Kim, D. Choi, Y. Jang, J. Hahn, H. Gwon, M. Yoon, S. Tahk, W. Chung, Young-Seok Cho, D. Choi, T. Hasegawa, T. Kataoka, S. Oh, Y. Honda, P. Fitzgerald, W. Fearon (2010)
Anatomic and Functional Evaluation of Bifurcation Lesions Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary InterventionCirculation: Cardiovascular Interventions, 3
The Xience Side Branch Access (SBA) stent is an everolimus‐eluting stent designed specifically for branching coronary geometry, providing wire access into the side branch (SB) regardless of the planned treatment strategy. The stent is delivered via a low‐profile, dual‐lumen, and single‐tip catheter. A single inflation deploys the stent in the main branch (MB) and opens a portal into the SB. It is through this portal opening, allowing wire access into the SB, that this device differentiates itself from certain other dedicated bifurcation devices currently in various stages of development and testing. The Xience SBA stent was compared with a standard Multi‐Link Vision® stent using a provisional T‐stenting strategy in an ovine beating heart model. The Xience SBA stent tended to be deployed with less mean contrast usage (21.05 vs. 43.23 mL; P = 0.09), shorter fluoroscopy time (2.55 vs. 4.52 minute; P = 0.12), and lower rates of guidewire entanglement (16% vs. 100%) compared with the workhorse stent. As a result, the total procedure time with the Xience SBA stent was significantly shorter than that with the standard stent (5.46 vs. 8.65 minute; P = 0.01). The Xience SBA stent was also evaluated by four recently trained interventionalists who had no previous experience with the device. Using a perfused synthetic heart model, SB access time was reduced by 54%, average fluoroscopy time was reduced by 46%, and average contrast usage was lowered by 39% with the Xience SBA compared with the standard stent. Initial experience in the ovine model suggests that the Xience SBA stent is also amenable for use in distal left main coronary artery disease, regardless of whether it is deployed in the left ascending coronary artery or left circumflex artery and the portal opened in the opposing vessel. On the basis of these experimental results, the Xience SBA stent is an easy to use and versatile device for the purpose of SB access and potentially for the treatment of bifurcation coronary artery lesions. (J Interven Cardiol 2012;25:337–343)
Journal of Interventional Cardiology – Wiley
Published: Aug 1, 2012
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.