Imaging Guided Combined Structural and Coronary Heart Procedures in One Setting, for Awake Patients: Does it Help Save Money and Time in a Resource- Constrained Health System, without Substantial Complications?
Abstract
The provision/receipt of cutting-edge cardiac care, in a country in financial crisis, is
a difficult task for both providers and patients. Many Sri Lankan patients seem to
present currently with multiple cardiac problems in a setting of an acute or convalescent
myocardial infarction, that requires additional procedures other than culprit coronary
artery revascularization by Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI). For financial and
skilled human resource implications, treating all these in one setting is desired by patients
in middle-income countries like Sri Lanka. The safety and efficacy of severe, non-culprit
artery revascularization have been evaluated in clinical trials in the past. However, the
safety or feasibility of performing structural heart interventions in the same setting as PCI
is based on clinical judgment, aided by cathlab hemodynamic data and imaging modalities, based on high-end digital equipment and software. We illustrate examples where such
procedures can be safely undertaken in a single setting, even in a resource- constrained
environment, assisted by contemporary digital technologies: complicated atrial septal
defect closure with complete right coronary occlusion intervention, and percutaneous
mitral commissurotomy with right coronary occlusion intervention, transcatheter aortic
valve implantation with left-main coronary intervention are presented as examples of such
combined structural and coronary procedures in one setting. Further randomized trials
will be required to systematically evaluate these experiences for widespread use.
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