Management of Calcified Coronary Lesions: A Practical Guide for Interventional Cardiologists Coronary artery calcification (CAC) is one of the most challenging scenarios encountered during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Calcified plaques reduce vessel compliance, make lesion crossing difficult, impair stent expansion, and increase the risk of procedural complications. As the population ages and diabetes and chronic kidney disease become more prevalent, interventional cardiologists are encountering heavily calcified lesions with increasing frequency. Modern PCI success depends not only on opening the artery but also on achieving optimal lesion preparation before stent implantation. Inadequately treated calcium remains one of the strongest predictors of stent failure. --- Why Calcified Lesions Matter Calcified plaques are associated with: Difficult guidewire and device delivery Balloon-resistant lesions Poor stent expansion Stent malapposition Edge dissection Stent thrombosis ...
Dr. Usman's Cardiology Notes
Cardiology Notes: Clinical Cases including ECG, Echocardiography, Cath, and MOCK Exams to sharpen your cardiology data interpretation skills. Healthcare is stressful!!! Learning cardiology shouldn't be !!!