Effect of Ultimaster Stents Treated to the Most Dilated Coronary Vessels

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2021
In patients with vasospasm or with negative remodeling, various vasodilator drugs used during coronary angiography can dilate the diameter of the reference vessel to measure the exact vessel size. In particular, nitrates are well known to induce pharmacological vasodilatory effects through vascular smooth muscle relaxation In actual clinical practice, it has been reported that when oral or spray-type nitrate preparations are administered to coronary artery stenosis lesions, the diameter of the reference vessel expands by about 10% compared to the existing vessel diameter. This may enable larger stenting in coronary artery stenosis lesions. Although many patients with vascular stenosis are accompanied by vasospasm and voice remodeling, in actual clinical practice, administration of vasodilators is only used in a small number of patients at the discretion of the surgeon. Nitrate vasodilators administered during coronary angiography are low-dose and short-acting drugs, and although a small number of patients may experience side effects such as short-term lowering of blood pressure, no serious side effects are reported . On this background, this study is to evaluate whether there is a difference in the diameter of the Ultimaster® stent treated with the conventional method compared to the maximally dilated coronary artery, and to evaluate the stability and effectiveness after the procedure.
Epistemonikos ID: f8ef5003cd2bdc82d73108f653d00255c5de3f2d
First added on: May 09, 2024