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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1986; 8:1089-1095
© 1986 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Histopathology after Nd-YAG laser percutaneous transluminal angioplasty of peripheral arteries

H Geschwind, M Fabre, BR Chaitman, M Lefebvre-Villardebo, A Ladouch, G Boussignac, JD Blair, and HL Kennedy

Laser recanalization of occluded femoral or popliteal arteries was performed in 12 patients using a continuous wave neodymium yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd-YAG) laser. The histologic findings of the laser-irradiated arterial segments in two of these patients are reported. The specimens were obtained 2 and 4 weeks after the laser procedure. The laser-irradiated vessel in Patient 1 had been partially recanalized with reduction of the atherosclerotic occlusion from 3 to 1 cm. The lased arterial lumen manifested thermal injury to the inner quarter of the arterial wall with vacuolization and a rim of carbonization occupying 10% of the width of the arterial wall, but without thrombus formation. Histologic examination in Patient 2 revealed no fibrin deposits, atherosclerotic debris or thrombi at the intimal arterial edge. At the crater site, thermal injury was apparent with vacuolization of the intimal fibrous tissue. The histologic sections obtained 4 weeks after the procedure revealed new fibrous intimal tissue without endothelialization in some of the heavily calcified tissue sections. Where the plaques were noncalcified, reendothelialization was noted with only minimal damage to the surrounding tissue. No medial or elastic fiber disruption was seen, and no aneurysmal dilation had occurred. Intimal splitting with a cleft between the tunica media and the intima was noted at the site of previous balloon angioplasty. In conclusion, the follow-up histologic findings 2 and 4 weeks after laser angioplasty in two patients using a specially designed catheter delivery system and cooling blood perfusate revealed thermal injury to the inner quarter of the arterial vessel wall and no evidence of thrombus formation.





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Copyright © 1986 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.