Advances in image reconstruction using either single or multimodality imaging data provide increasingly accurate three-dimensional (3D) patient's arterial models for shear stress evaluation using... Show moreAdvances in image reconstruction using either single or multimodality imaging data provide increasingly accurate three-dimensional (3D) patient's arterial models for shear stress evaluation using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). We aim to evaluate the impacts on endothelial shear stress (ESS) derived from a simple image reconstruction using 3D-quantitative coronary angiography (3D-QCA) versus a multimodality reconstruction method using optical coherence tomography (OCT) in patients' vessels treated with bioresorbable scaffolds. Seven vessels at baseline and five-year follow-up of seven patients from a previous CFD investigation were retrospectively selected for a head-to-head comparison of angiography-derived versus OCT-derived ESS. 3D-QCA significantly underestimated the minimum stent area [MSA] (-2.38mm2) and the stent length (-1.46 mm) compared to OCT-fusion method reconstructions. After carefully co-registering the region of interest for all cases with a sophisticated statistical method, the difference in MSA measurements as well as the inability of angiography to visualise the strut footprint in the lumen surface have translated to higher angiography-derived ESS than OCT-derived ESS (1.76 Pa or 1.52 times for the overlapping segment). The difference in ESS widened with a more restricted region of interest (1.97 Pa or 1.63 times within the scaffold segment). Angiography and OCT offer two distinctive methods of ESS calculation. Angiography-derived ESS tends to overestimate the ESS compared to OCT-derived ESS. Further investigations into ESS analysis resolution play a vital role in adopting OCT-derived ESS. Show less
Kim, H.O.; Jiang, B.; Poon, E.K.W.; Thondapu, V.; Kim, C.J.; Kurihara, O.; ... ; Jang, I.K. 2022
Background: Local hemodynamics are known to play an important role in the development of plaque erosion. Recent studies showed that erosion patients might be treated conservatively without stent... Show moreBackground: Local hemodynamics are known to play an important role in the development of plaque erosion. Recent studies showed that erosion patients might be treated conservatively without stent implantation. We investigated evolution of hemodynamic parameters on the plaque erosion site in conservatively treated patients. Methods: Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations were performed using the coronary angiogram and optical coherence tomography (OCT) images of non-stent treated erosion patients who had serial OCT studies. Calculated CFD parameters included endothelial shear stress (ESS), ESS gradient (ESSG), and oscillatory shear index (OSI).Results: The CFD parameters at the erosion and non-erosion sites were compared among baseline (n = 23), and 1-month (n = 20) and 12-month (n = 16) follow-ups. The erosion site had higher ESS and ESSG values than the non-erosion sites at baseline (mean ESS: 3.00 vs 1.36 Pa, p < 0.01; mean ESSG: 1.71 vs. 0.65 Pa/mm, p = 0.01), 1-month (mean ESS: 2.89 vs 1.19 Pa, p < 0.01; mean ESSG: 1.71 vs. 0.60 Pa/mm, p < 0.01), and 12-month (mean ESS: 3.26 vs 1.59 Pa, p < 0.01; mean ESSG: 1.87 vs. 0.78 Pa/mm, p < 0.01). OSI was not different between erosion and and non-erosion sites. Conclusions: ESS and ESSG values were higher at the plaque erosion sites compared to non-erosion sites. Elevated ESS and ESSG at the erosion site persisted up to 12 months. These data indicate that a local thrombogenic milieu related to hemodynamic perturbation persists up to 12 months at the plaque erosion sites following conservative treatment. Show less