Herz
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Percutaneous coronary intervention (PTCA, PCI) is the most frequently used therapy for the treatment of stenoses or occlusions of coronary arteries. In Germany, six PCIs are performed for every coronary bypass surgery. Today, stents are implanted in over 80% of PCIs to improve the acute and long-term results. ⋯ If a DES was nevertheless implanted, triple therapy (coumadin, ASA, and clopidogrel) is recommended--with an INR (International Normalized Ratio) target of 2.0, possibly adding a proton pump inhibitor. In case of nondeferrable surgery, dual platelet inhibition should be continued, if possible (like dental extractions), or perioperatively converted to a small-molecule glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor--under in-hospital survey. Further developments of next-generation DES with different drugs, modified release kinetics, specifically abluminal drug release or bioabsorbable polymers or absorbable stents are necessary, in order to reduce the duration of dual platelet inhibition to the range of BMS--but maintaining the well-established antiproliferative effects of DES.
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This review summarizes some information on the management of diabetic patients at risk for or with already established coronary artery disease. Improved knowledge among diabetologists regarding treatment and prevention of cardiovascular complications and among cardiologists regarding diabetology is a prerequisite for progress to be made for patients with diabetes mellitus with cardiovascular disease. ⋯ The high costs associated with the management of diabetic patients with coronary artery disease suggest that improved primary and secondary prevention very likely will be cost-effective. Reference is made to the recently published European guidelines for diabetes, prediabetes and cardiovascular disease issued by the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD).
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Review Comparative Study
[Drug-eluting stents for diabetic patients. A critical appraisal of the currently available data from randomized trials].
Patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and diabetes mellitus represent a peculiar high-risk population because of their specific characteristics of atherosclerotic disease. In conjunction with the diabetes-related comorbidities, percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) often leads not only to a worse acute result but - also as compared to nondiabetics - to significantly worse long-term results due to the higher restenosis rates. The rapid introduction of effective drug-eluting stents (DES), which undoubtedly reduce the restenosis rates as compared with bare-metal stents (BMS), brought great hope of providing diabetic patients better and longer-lasting interventional solutions. This overview compiles the currently available data from randomized trials and meta-analyses. ⋯ Of the 22 DES having received a CE certificate, long-term data over 5 years for patients with diabetes are available only for the Cypher and the Taxus stents. Compared with BMS, patients with diabetes and their characteristically small vessels and long lesions predominantly benefit from effective DES. The sometimes postulated differences between Cypher and Taxus in diabetic patients could not be convincingly demonstrated; larger randomized trials with a primary clinical endpoint are required for this. PCI cannot be considered a scientifically sound and evidence- based alternative to bypass surgery in diabetic patients with multivessel disease and/or unprotected left main stenosis until we have the results of the SYNTAX, COMBAT and FREEDOM trials.
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Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia in the elderly and is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality, mostly due to the consequences of thromboembolism. Anticoagulation reduces the risk of stroke and death considerably, the risk reduction depending on the patient's absolute risk. ⋯ In addition, warfarin therapy imposes a variety of lifestyle constraints, including frequent blood test monitoring and, possibly, dietary modification, and is associated with a number of drug interactions. Careful assessment of the absolute risk of stroke on the one hand and bleeding complications on the other hand will guide the use of appropriate prophylaxis against thromboembolism and its consequences.
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Management of acute ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) demands rapid and complete reperfusion of the infarct-related artery (IRA). With postinfarction prognosis depending on time delay from onset of symptoms to complete reperfusion (TIMI 3 flow) of the IRA, primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) performed by an experienced team has been shown to be superior to thrombolytic therapy with lower mortality, less frequent occurrence of nonfatal reinfarction and stroke, and thus represents the preferred treatment strategy according to the national and international guidelines. For regional implementation of PPCI, particularly in rural areas, information and transfer logistics within networks of care and direct transport of an infarction patient to a PCI hospital rather than to the closest hospital are a challenge. ⋯ Moreover, there was no evidence of differences in left ventricular ejection fraction between groups. Thus, transportation of STEMI patients within an established PCI network did not result in any prognostic disadvantage. Efficient network logistics with transportation for PPCI in acute STEMI ensure both safety and outcome profiles similar to patients treated by PCI in metropolitan areas.