The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 100, 606-611, Copyright © 1990 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
Intraoperative coronary artery endarterectomy with excimer laser
JP Ollivier, I Gandjbakhch, S Avrillier, E Delettre, JL Bussiere and C Cabrol
Department of Cardiology, Hopital Militaire du Valde-Grace, Paris, France.
Compared with continuous-wave lasers, excimer lasers exhibit several in
vitro advantages: nonthermal ablation process and linear relation between
the number of pulses and the depth of the crater. A 308 nm, 20 nsec pulse
duration, 1 to 5 repetition rate laser was specifically designed for
clinical application. At the time of cardiopulmonary bypass in 10
symptomatic patients, before bypass grafting, a 1 mm diameter core
specifically ultraviolet-tipped fiberoptic scope was introduced via the
coronary arteriotomy and placed upstream (seven patients) and downstream
(three patients) in contact with the stenosis. Laser power was increasingly
delivered up to the clearing of the stenosis or occlusion. Quality of
angioplasty was controlled by calibration of the neolumen, cardioplegic
solution output through the laser-treated segment, and an eighth day or
sixth month coronary arteriogram. In the first three patients studied on
the eighth day, all laser-treated coronary artery segments showed an early
parallel-linked patent neolumen despite competitive bypass graft flow. In
the patients studied after 6 months, all recanalized segments were patent
except one; in one patient the venous graft was occluded, but the upstream
laser angioplasty was patent. The main limitation of the method lies in the
fact that laser coronary recanalization is confined to the fiber core
diameter. We conclude that (1) excimer laser angioplasty may be safe and
efficient during surgical procedure and (2) as catheter flexibility remains
the most critical problem, we are now assuming an appropriate tool with a
multifiber system that is suitable for intraoperative as well as
percutaneous routes.