Abstract
Stenting results in a larger lumen than conventional balloon angioplasty. This is the major determinant of a good acute and long-term result. In this non-randomised, single centre trial, intravascular ultrasound was used preinterventionally to guide the choice of the balloon size. The aim was to achieve a maximum lumen area with balloon angioplasty only. We included 346 patients with 360 lesions. The diameter of the external elastic lamina by intravascular ultrasound was 4.67 mm. A mean balloon size of 4.0 mm was chosen. The initial luminal gain was 1.82 mm, the lumen area post intervention was 6.6 mm 2 . Dissections occurred frequently but the incidence of major adverse events was not increased. At one year follow-up, the overall event free survival was 81%. Target lesion revascularisation was performed in 34 patients (10%). An angiographic follow-up was available for 261 patients (76%). Restenosis (> 50% diameter Stenosis) was found in 21%. The results show, that ultrasound guidance of balloon angioplasty provides a means to achieve a large initial luminal gain without the routine use of stents. The acute and long-term results suggest that the approach is safe and efficient. The data compare favorably with similar studies using advanced intravascular diagnostic tools to guide the angioplasty procedure.