Browsing by Author "Ungi, Imre (6602555341)"
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Publication A multicentre, prospective, randomised controlled trial to assess the safety and effectiveness of cooling as an adjunctive therapy to percutaneous intervention in patients with acute myocardial infarction: The COOL AMI EU Pivotal Trial(2021) ;Noc, Marko (7004055753) ;Laanmets, Peep (55345333500) ;Neskovic, Aleksandar N. (35597744900) ;Petrović, Milovan (16234216100) ;Stanetic, Bojan (56624448800) ;Aradi, Daniel (22984252200) ;Kiss, Robert G. (57050400100) ;Ungi, Imre (6602555341) ;Merkely, Béla (7004434435) ;Hudec, Martin (57517803300) ;Blasko, Peter (21233522600) ;Horvath, Ivan (35315794200) ;Davies, John R. (56939639900) ;Vukcevic, Vladan (15741934700) ;Holzer, Michael (15740955800) ;Metzler, Bernhard (56180476500) ;Witkowski, Adam (7005762608) ;Erglis, Andrejs (6602259794) ;Fister, Misa (13105598500) ;Nagy, Gergely (57195331558) ;Bulum, Josko (23017736900) ;Edes, Istvan (7003689191) ;Peruga, Jan Z. (6603426226) ;Średniawa, Beata (57197282694) ;Erlinge, David (7005319185)Keeble, Thomas R. (20334838200)Background: Despite primary PCI (PPCI), ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) can still result in large infarct size (IS). New technology with rapid intravascular cooling showed positive signals for reduction in IS in anterior STEMI. Aims: We investigated the effectiveness and safety of rapid systemic intravascular hypothermia as an adjunct to PPCI in conscious patients, with anterior STEMI, without cardiac arrest. Methods: Hypothermia was induced using the ZOLL® Proteus™ intravascular cooling system. After randomisation of 111 patients, 58 to hypothermia and 53 to control groups, the study was prematurely discontinued by the sponsor due to inconsistent patient logistics between the groups resulting in significantly longer total ischaemic delay in the hypothermia group (232 vs 188 minutes; p<0.001). Results: There were no differences in angiographic features and PPCI result between the groups. Intravascular temperature at wire crossing was 33.3+0.9°C. Infarct size/left ventricular (IS/LV) mass by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) at day 4-6 was 21.3% in the hypothermia group and 20.0% in the control group (p=0.540). Major adverse cardiac events at 30 days increased non-significantly in the hypothermia group (8.6% vs 1.9%; p=0.117) while cardiogenic shock (10.3% vs 0%; p=0.028) and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (43.1% vs 3.8%; p<0.001) were significantly more frequent in the hypothermia group. Conclusions: The ZOLL Proteus intravascular cooling system reduced temperature to 33.3°C before PPCI in patients with anterior STEMI. Due to inconsistent patient logistics between the groups, this hypothermia protocol resulted in a longer ischaemic delay, did not reduce IS/LV mass and was associated with increased adverse events. © Europa Digital & Publishing 2021. All rights reserved. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Wire-based antegrade dissection re-entry technique for coronary chronic total occlusions percutaneous revascularization: Experience from the ERCTO Registry(2023) ;Galassi, Alfredo R. (7004438532) ;Vadalà, Giuseppe (57203403924) ;Maniscalco, Laura (57204080896) ;Gasparini, Gabriele (12775032600) ;Jo, Dens (58562350400) ;Bozinovic, Nenad Z. (56614042000) ;Gorgulu, Sevket (56209450200) ;Gehrig, Thomas (55644000761) ;Grancini, Luca (6602258753) ;Ungi, Imre (6602555341) ;La Scala, Eugenio (6508334276) ;Ladwiniec, Andrew (26026356500) ;Stojkovic, Sinisa (6603759580) ;La Manna, Alessio (57211114708) ;Tumscitz, Carlo (7801372513) ;Elhadad, Simon (6602982816) ;Werner, Gerald S. (7202099557) ;Sianos, Georgios (7003691774) ;Garbo, Roberto (6506467751) ;Carlino, Mauro (6603766324) ;Mashayekhi, Kambis (36915264400)di Mario, Carlo (7101723312)Background: The recent development and widespread adoption of antegrade dissection re-entry (ADR) techniques have been underlined as one of the antegrade strategies in all worldwide CTO consensus documents. However, historical wire-based ADR experience has suffered from disappointing long-term outcomes. Aims: Compare technical success, procedural success, and long-term outcome of patients who underwent wire-based ADR technique versus antegrade wiring (AW). Methods: One thousand seven hundred and ten patients, from the prospective European Registry of Chronic Total Occlusions (ERCTO), underwent 1806 CTO procedures between January 2018 and December 2021, at 13 high-volume ADR centers. Among all 1806 lesions attempted by the antegrade approach, 72% were approached with AW techniques and 28% with wire-based ADR techniques. Results: Technical and procedural success rates were lower in wire-based ADR than in AW (90.3% vs. 96.4%, p < 0.001; 87.7% vs. 95.4%, p < 0.001, respectively); however, wire-based ADR was used successfully more often in complex lesions as compared to AW (p = 0.017). Wire-based ADR was used in most cases (85%) after failure of AW or retrograde procedures. At a mean clinical follow-up of 21 ± 15 months, major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCEs) did not differ between AW and wire-based ADR (12% vs. 15.1%, p = 0.106); both AW and wire-based ADR procedures were associated with significant symptom improvements. Conclusions: As compared to AW, wire-based ADR is a reliable and effective strategy successfully used in more complex lesions and often after the failure of other techniques. At long-term follow-up, patient's MACCEs and symptoms improvement were similar in both antegrade techniques. © 2023 The Authors. Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
