The purpose of this trial is to compare post-conditioning to standard angioplasty (50/50 chance) in patients who present with an acute heart attack and are taken directly for an angioplasty procedure. Post conditioning is a procedure that involves balloon inflation followed by deflation in a series of cycles that appears to show (based on early data) that it can decrease the amount of damage to the heart muscle as compared to standard angioplasty procedures. Hypothesis: For Subjects undergoing direct PCI for STEMI, post conditioning with cycles of balloon inflation/deflation within the first minute following the re-establishment of coronary blood blow, will decrease the amount of irreversible myocardial damage assessed by delayed enhancement contrast CMR.
In patients who suffer a myocardial infarction, the blood flow usually ceases due to plaque rupture leading to thrombus formation and vessel occlusion. The resultant entity is known as ST Elevation segment myocardial infarction (STEMI) and is a significant health issue in industrialized countries. There are over 50,000 STEMI's every year in Canada and up to 10% of these patients die in hospital and another 10% die within the first year after their heart attack. The more common problem however is not death, but irreparable damage to the left ventricle leading to LV dysfunction and subsequent heart failure and arrythmias. Re-establishing blood flow promptly by administering plasminogen activators (lytics) or mechanically by performing angioplasty is possible and has lowered the mortality rate dramatically. Although reperfusion is necessary, it gives rise to an entity known as ischemia-reperfusion where acutely re-establishing blood flow and oxygen levels of the heart has detrimental effects. Clinically this is manifested as no-reflow that causes subsequent damage to the left ventricle and decreases the beneficial affect of early reperfusion by PCI. The ischemia-reperfusion effect sets off a molecular cascade of events involving unfavorable interaction between neutrophils, platelets and endothelium, that is fairly well identified. Efforts to pharmacologically block this effect have not proven to be particularly effective. Post conditioning follows from a concept of pre-conditioning in animals that showed a decrease in myocardial infarct size. Pre-conditioning is not useful as it requires to be performed prior to the development of ischemia/injury. Post conditioning in preliminary studies with animals and one small study in humans have shown promising results for decrease in infarct size. Post conditioning is a procedure of gradual conditioning in which the artery is opened and closed in cycles with inflation/deflation of the culprit artery followed immediately by standard PCI and placement of stent.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
102
4 cycles of balloon inflation /deflation (post-conditioning) within first minute of opening up artery in primary PCI for STEMI vs usual balloon inflation sequence
Foothills Medical Centre
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Infarct size as measured by: salvage index = total area at risk - infarct size/total area at risk
Time frame: 3-5 days post MI
Corrected TIMI frame count (cTFC)
Time frame: Immediately post PCI
Myocardial blush score
Time frame: Immediately post PCI
CK release (under the curve)
Time frame: 1st 48 hours post MI
ST segment resolution by 48 hrs compared with admission
Time frame: 1st 48 hours post MI
MRI infarct size
Time frame: 3-5 days and 6 months
MRI maximal transmural extent of irreversible injury
Time frame: 3-5 days and 6 months
CMR regional end-systolic wall stress
Time frame: 3-5 days and 6 months
CMR Myocardial perfusion
Time frame: 3-5 days and 6 months
CMR Myocardial oxygenation
Time frame: 3-5 days and 6 months
Peripheral endothelial function testing (brachial u/s and pulse arterial tonometry) in hospital
Time frame: 3-5 days post MI
CMR quantification of volume of no-reflow
Time frame: 3-5 days and 6 months
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