Body Surface Area and Sheath Size as a Risk Factors for Vascular Complications After Coronary Angiography Via Femoral Approach | ||
Iraqi Postgraduate Medical Journal | ||
Article 1, Volume 15, Issue 4, December 2016, Pages 481-485 PDF (0 K) | ||
Authors | ||
Salah Mahdy Majeed; Ali Mohammed Jawad; Haithem Ahmed Al-Rubaie; Zahraa Akram Thabit; Saad kadhum Kareem; Manal Madany A. Qader; Shatha Sami; Wisam Akram; Faten Shalal; Mustafa Nema; Mudher Al-Khairalla | ||
Abstract | ||
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Vascular complications have been recognized as an important factor in morbidity after diagnostic and percutaneous coronary interventions. OBJECTIVE: This study sought to evaluate vascular body mass index and sheath size as risk factors for vascular complications after diagnostic coronary angiography via femoral approach. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This historical prospective cohort study was carried out from February 2012 till January 2013, at the Iraqi Center for the Heart Disease. A total number of 2400 patients underwent 3600 procedures, diagnostic coronary angiography (2196) and PCI(1404) via their common femoral arteries. Result: Body surface area > 2m2 is a statistically significant factor for vascular complications, and <1.6m2 is also an important statistically significant risk for vascular complications. The results of the current study according to sheath size show:- during the diagnostic coronary angiograph procedures, sheath size 5F was the least(n=34), in which no reported vascular complications. Sheath size 6F (n = 1661) with (75) 4.5% complicated vs. (1586) 95.5% didn’t, sheath size 7F used among (501) patients, vascular complications developed in (171) 34.1% vs. (330) 65.9%. In comparison between the incidence of vascular complications among sheath sizes (6F, 7F) vs. 5F the P value < 0.001 for both. During the PCI procedures, sheath size 6F was used among (140) patients, with vascular complications in one patient (0.7%). 7F used among (1219), with vascular complications in (115) 9.4%, and 8F used in (45) patients with vascular complications in (45) 100%. By using 6F as a referent, sheaths 7F&8F were statistical significant(p Keywords KEY WORDS: body surface area --- sheath size --- vascular complications. | ||
Keywords | ||
KEY WORDS; sheath size; vascular complications; ZAP; Binet staging; KEY WORD; diabetic death; HbAi; KEYWORDS; delivery mode; cesarean section; pelvimetry; deep transverse arrest | ||
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