Publication | Open Access
The prognostic spectrum of left main stenosis.
268
Citations
11
References
1978
Year
Heart FailureEndovascular TechniquePrognosisDiagnosisSurgeryVascular SurgeryEndovascular ManagementMain StenosisPublic HealthCardiologyRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingHigh Risk SubgroupCardiac PathologyInterventional NeuroradiologyCardiovascular DiseasePatient SafetyLeft Main StenosisValvular Heart DiseaseMedicine
Three-year survival for 163 consecutive medically treated patients with 50% or greater left main stenosis was 50%. Survival was significantly higher for patients with 50 to 70% left main stenosis (one and three-year survivals of 91% and 66%) than for patients with 70% or greater left main stenosis (one and three-year survivals of 72% and 41%). In fact, left main lesions of less than 70% were not associated with the increased risk usually attributed to patients with left main stenosis. A number of noninvasive and catheterization characteristics were significant predictors of survival for patients with 70% or greater left main stenosis. Noninvasive descriptors defined a low risk subgroup (one and three-year survivals of 97% and 74%) and a high risk subgroup (one- and three-year survivals of 59% and 25%). These observations have important implications both in assessing therapeutic interventions and in managing individual patients.
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