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1 coronary catheter with the tip distal to the coronary lesion.
2  relationship to the location of the culprit coronary lesion.
3 ances were preserved by the territory of the coronary lesion.
4 ation (Hosmer-Lemeshow P=0.540) for an acute coronary lesion.
5 /=0.8 was regarded to indicate a significant coronary lesion.
6  gold standard for a hemodynamic significant coronary lesion.
7 tion fraction <40%), as well as more complex coronary lesions.
8  performed in 689 patients with 1,639 native coronary lesions.
9 tage of stenosis, and the development of new coronary lesions.
10 vascular ultrasound-guided stenting of 1,015 coronary lesions.
11 e best method for interrogating intermediate coronary lesions.
12 tal stents (BMS) in the treatment of de novo coronary lesions.
13 trasound analysis was performed in 46 native coronary lesions.
14 stenosis after stent implantation in de novo coronary lesions.
15 ice-independent relationships seen in native coronary lesions.
16 he preferred treatment for heavily calcified coronary lesions.
17 nlargement commonly (54%) occurs at stenotic coronary lesions.
18 ide anatomic and hemodynamic significance of coronary lesions.
19 st among patients with left main and complex coronary lesions.
20 stenosis in moderately to severely calcified coronary lesions.
21 r revascularization due to the recurrence of coronary lesions.
22 included, of which 163 (40%) had significant coronary lesions.
23 was identified as a predictor of significant coronary lesions.
24 tent IVOCT image data were obtained from 110 coronary lesions.
25  vulnerable plaque phenotypes to more stable coronary lesions.
26  performance for the presence of significant coronary lesions.
27 gorithm detected, quantified, and classified coronary lesions.
28 ic severity of angiographically intermediate coronary lesions.
29 tion for the treatment of severely calcified coronary lesions.
30 nt interventional tool for heavily calcified coronary lesions.
31 lanned stent implantation in de-novo, native coronary lesions.
32  drug-eluting stents implantation in de novo coronary lesions.
33 ly identified necrotic core in ex vivo human coronary lesions.
34 iveness of IVL in severely calcified de novo coronary lesions.
35 es, of functionally significant intermediate coronary lesions.
36 curate in detecting functionally significant coronary lesions.
37           FFR was </=0.80 in 54 of 144 (38%) coronary lesions.
38 the gold standard for assessing intermediate coronary lesions.
39 stigated the predictive factors for unstable coronary lesions.
40 tual histology IVUS and FFR for intermediate coronary lesions.
41 ve, more targeted treatment of KD to prevent coronary lesions.
42 icient mice were protected from LCWE-induced coronary lesions.
43  simple and medium complexity single de novo coronary lesions.
44 vascular smooth muscle cells in the advanced coronary lesions.
45 tional cardiology for treatment of calcified coronary lesions.
46 t natural history trajectories of individual coronary lesions.
47 ding treatment of patients with intermediate coronary lesions.
48 -IV trial, 1314 patients with single de novo coronary lesions 10 to 28 mm in length, with reference-v
49               A total of 1,314 patients with coronary lesions 10- to 28-mm long in 2.5- to 3.75-mm ve
50 vent (n = 131 of 264), mostly related to new coronary lesions (17.3% vs. 7.8%; p = 0.01; hazard ratio
51 bstudy enrolled 241 patients with 263 native coronary lesions (201 PES, 62 BMS) with baseline and 13-
52 tion myocardial infarction but have residual coronary lesions; (3) patients who have suffered a non-S
53 y II included fewer left anterior descending coronary lesions (46.5% vs. 32.8%, p < 0.01), more type
54                          Regression of human coronary lesions after 5 weeks of treatment with apoA-I(
55 on angioplasty was performed in 1,266 native coronary lesions alone (n = 541) or after extraction ath
56 rediction model for the presence of an acute coronary lesion among patients resuscitated from an arre
57                                  Significant coronary lesions and 30-day mortality.
58 y should be favored in patients with complex coronary lesions and anatomy and PCI in less complicated
59 ogical significance of intermediate severity coronary lesions and cases with inadequate image quality
60 ts who underwent intervention of 2780 native coronary lesions and had complete high-quality preinterv
61 the hemodynamic significance of intermediate coronary lesions and is recommended by guideline committ
62 lectrocardiograms for predicting significant coronary lesions and mortality in patients with successf
63 ure, minimum lumen diameter (MLD), number of coronary lesions and total occlusions were not significa
64 c patients or those with ischaemia-producing coronary lesions, and reduces ischaemia to a greater ext
65  anatomic and morphologic characteristics of coronary lesions, and their comparative performance in p
66 sclerosis, BMI, as well as CRP and number of coronary lesions, are independently associated with acut
67 n of the disease through repeated use as new coronary lesions arise.
68 mise to substantially increase physiological coronary lesion assessment in the catheterization labora
69      CFI was proportional to severity of the coronary lesion at baseline (r=0.63, P<0.0001) but not 6
70 antation in a broad cross section of de novo coronary lesions at 1 year are unknown.
71  We randomized 704 patients with bifurcation coronary lesions at 58 centers (30 from Europe and 28 fr
72 ne to concluding angiogram of all qualifying coronary lesions averaged for each patient.
73 e effective in reducing restenosis in simple coronary lesions, but the evidence base for contemporary
74 ned anatomic and hemodynamic assessment of a coronary lesion by a single noninvasive test.
75 hology and composition of culprit and stable coronary lesions by multidetector computed tomography (M
76 ention remodeling was assessed in 108 native coronary lesions by using intravascular ultrasound (IVUS
77                           The mean number of coronary lesions causing 30% to 75% diameter stenosis wa
78 quent restenosis rates at 6 months in native coronary lesions (CAVEAT I, 50.8% for intimal resection
79 s the prediction of functionally significant coronary lesions compared with visual CTCA assessment bu
80 shed by clinical variables, they had greater coronary lesion complexity by American Heart Association
81 atus alone and for treatment by DM status by coronary lesion complexity.
82                Similar to human lesions, the coronary lesions contain macrophages, activated mDCs, an
83 ional registry of patients with intermediate coronary lesions, defined as 40% to 80% stenosis by angi
84               The management of intermediate coronary lesions, defined by a diameter stenosis of 40%
85                                In total, 144 coronary lesions detected on CTCA were visually graded f
86                    In the placebo group, new coronary lesions developed in 21 of 38 smokers and in 28
87 nt elevations on the presence of significant coronary lesions (diagnostic performance) and 30-day mor
88  basis that the majority of these individual coronary lesions do not in fact go on to cause clinical
89 nonsubjective method to diagnose significant coronary lesions during MR stress testing.
90 ) with each other or against BMS for de novo coronary lesions, enrolling at least 100 patients and wi
91       Plaque rupture occurs if stress within coronary lesions exceeds the protection exerted by the f
92 -elevation MI (STEMI) patients with advanced coronary lesions expressed higher SYK and KMT5A gene lev
93  accuracy for the detection of flow-limiting coronary lesions (FFR</=0.80) was compared with visual C
94  were the frequency of detecting significant coronary lesions for which there are AHA class 1 indicat
95 cium channel-blocking agents may prevent new coronary lesion formation, the progression of minimal le
96 n vascular and extravascular tissues promote coronary lesion formation.
97                          We stained multiple coronary lesions from 24 randomly selected patients who
98                          Sixty-seven stented coronary lesions from 59 patients who presented with ACS
99 ally colocalized to apoptotic VSMCs in human coronary lesions, further supporting a functional role f
100 ation (h2=0.51+/-0.17; P=0.001), and ectatic coronary lesions (h2=0.52+/-0.07; P=0.001).
101 ry muscle infarction (papMI) and the culprit coronary lesion has not been fully investigated.
102 ercutaneous revascularization of significant coronary lesions has been the routine strategy in TAVR c
103   Although effective coverage of challenging coronary lesions has warranted the use of overlapping dr
104                                      Complex coronary lesions have higher ESS compared to simple lesi
105 n be utilized in treating severely calcified coronary lesions; however, the temporal trends, patient
106 rasound imaging was used to study 212 native coronary lesions in 209 patients after percutaneous tran
107 .3 months) IVUS was used to study 251 native coronary lesions in 241 patients; 63 patients had treate
108 er after successful PCI of all flow-limiting coronary lesions in 898 patients presenting with myocard
109  Thirty patients with at least 2 significant coronary lesions in different vessels were treated with
110 e and is expressed in the endothelium lining coronary lesions in mice and humans.
111 atomy and for early detection and grading of coronary lesions in non-diabetic patients.
112 t mice restored the ability of LCWE to cause coronary lesions in response to LCWE.
113                           The development of coronary lesions in retransplanted isografts underlines
114 clerosis and prevents the development of new coronary lesions in smokers.
115 hy and the functional invasive assessment of coronary lesions in the work-up pre-TAVR.
116 ta play critical roles in the development of coronary lesions in this KD mouse model, blocked by IL-1
117              This problem affects studies of coronary lesions in which microcalcification processes a
118 liminary reports of studies involving simple coronary lesions indicate that a sirolimus-eluting stent
119 f WT and 100% of B cell(null) mice developed coronary lesions, indicating that T cells were required
120                             When the culprit coronary lesion is distal to the right atrial (RA) branc
121 might propose that stenting all intermediate coronary lesions is an appropriate solution.
122 lantation of the DREAMS 2G device in de-novo coronary lesions is feasible, with favourable safety and
123      Optimal plaque preparation of calcified coronary lesions is key to prevent stent failure.
124 n the era of drug-eluting stents for diffuse coronary lesions, IVUS-guided percutaneous coronary inte
125  A total of 1043 patients with focal de novo coronary lesions, &lt;25 mm in length, in 2.5- to 4.0-mm ve
126                                              Coronary lesions may impair the transmission of pressure
127                                   Borderline coronary lesions might become functionally significant a
128  coronary stent deployment have more complex coronary lesion morphology and a more complicated clinic
129 g-Eluting Stents in the Treatment of De Novo Coronary Lesions [NEXT]; NCT01373502).
130 ntly from the development of significant new coronary lesions, not initially severe enough to cause i
131 rteritis that histopathologically mimics the coronary lesions observed in KD patients.
132 racoronary physiological evaluation of >/= 1 coronary lesion of intermediate severity between April 1
133                                              Coronary lesions of intermediate stenosis demonstrate si
134 mposition and macrophage infiltration in the coronary lesions of patients with diabetes mellitus.
135             FFR was measured in vessels with coronary lesions of varying severity using a coronary pr
136                    Most severely obstructive coronary lesions often remain quiescent and seldom desta
137 32, p = 0.005) and minimum lumen diameter of coronary lesions (OR: 1.83, 95% CI: 1.01 to 3.55, p = 0.
138 subjects with the TT or CT genotype had >/=1 coronary lesion (P=0.001).
139                                              Coronary lesions predominantly arose in the first 2-3 cm
140                     Physiology assessment of coronary lesion prepercutaneous coronary intervention (P
141 e myocardial jeopardy index, total number of coronary lesions, prior coronary revascularization, and
142                                  One or more coronary lesions progressed in 16 of 34 lovastatin-treat
143 al coronary events was positively related to coronary lesion progression for all three surrogate end
144                       The study included 150 coronary lesions proven to have moderate or severe steno
145 ed 2,487 patients with diabetes or high-risk coronary lesions randomizing to OCT- vs angiography-guid
146 s compared with bare metal stents in de novo coronary lesions reduces major adverse cardiac events in
147                   The treatment of calcified coronary lesions requires optimal lesion preparation to
148 ed by the inability to identify intermediate coronary lesions responsible for ischemia.
149                    Routine FFR assessment of coronary lesions safely changes management strategy in a
150                 The assessment of functional coronary lesion severity using intracoronary physiologic
151 he Sirolimus-Eluting Stent in De Novo Native Coronary Lesions (SIRIUS) study.
152  Use of CCTA for physiological evaluation of coronary lesion-specific ischemia may facilitate evaluat
153 trial recruited patients with de novo native coronary lesions suitable for 1- or 2-vessel treatment w
154 lternative strategy that can target multiple coronary lesions suitable for treatment with any approve
155 er to discriminate high-risk versus low-risk coronary lesions than [(18)F]FDG.
156 o accelerated atherosclerosis, especially of coronary lesions that are susceptible to rupture.
157 ses were possible both of differences in the coronary lesions that developed in a normolipidemic as c
158                                              Coronary lesions that later provoke acute myocardial inf
159 surgical treatment of significantly stenotic coronary lesions, the comprehensive and serial assessmen
160 inical trial involving patients with complex coronary lesions, the use of a sirolimus-eluting stent h
161  to estimate the hemodynamic significance of coronary lesions, these pressure-derived indices provide
162         After treatment of all flow-limiting coronary lesions, three-vessel imaging was done with a c
163 stratification of patients with intermediate coronary lesions to appropriate therapy.
164      Thirty-one patients with de novo native coronary lesions treated with DCA in the Serial Ultrasou
165                  Physicians tended to assess coronary lesions treated with percutaneous coronary inte
166 trasound was used to study 25 de novo native coronary lesions treated with single MultiLink stents wi
167 p at 8.3 months) were performed in 15 native coronary lesions treated with the QuaDS-QP2 stent.
168 ing outcomes of patients with single de novo coronary lesions treated with ZES or PES.
169 S (Sirolimus-Eluting Stent in De-Novo Native Coronary Lesions) trial.
170                           In all significant coronary lesions two observers measured the degree of st
171    Eighty-four stable patients with isolated coronary lesions underwent coronary stent deployment sta
172  receptor antagonist prevented LCWE-mediated coronary lesions up to 3 days after LCWE injection.
173 risk stratified for the presence of an acute coronary lesion using 4 easily measured variables.
174 nsitivity but improved specificity for right coronary lesions using attenuation/scatter correction me
175 or the detection of functionally significant coronary lesions using fractional flow reserve (FFR) as
176 gle-arm trial evaluating outcomes in de novo coronary lesions visually estimated to be 10 to 28 mm in
177                       The mean length of the coronary lesions was 32 mm.
178              The functional relevance of 133 coronary lesions was assessed by FFR in 54 patients with
179            After adjustment, PCI of unstable coronary lesions was independently associated with impro
180 ity assessment of the detectability index of coronary lesions was performed.
181   The predictive performance for significant coronary lesions was poor across all electrocardiogram p
182 timal cutoff values to predict flow-limiting coronary lesion were 10 mm for lesion length, 1.8 mm2 fo
183                                          All coronary lesions were 80% to 95% stenosis in severity.
184                                 Overall, 765 coronary lesions were analyzed (culprit lesion precursor
185 IV trial, 1,314 patients with single de novo coronary lesions were assigned to implantation of the sl
186                                              Coronary lesions were classified as lesions with patholo
187 Before the introduction of DES, intermediate coronary lesions were commonly managed based on physiolo
188                                    Calcified coronary lesions were detected in all three image sets i
189 lysis also showed that CRP and the number of coronary lesions were independent predictors of risk of
190                                              Coronary lesions were induced in Yorkshire albino swine
191             Four groups of 5 balloon-induced coronary lesions were irradiated with 8, 12, 16, and 24
192  trial, in which 1,314 patients with de novo coronary lesions were randomized to either the paclitaxe
193 ts (aged >=18 years) with severely calcified coronary lesions were randomly assigned (1:1) to orbital
194                      Patients with calcified coronary lesions were screened in 3 centers.
195  not adequately resolve complex Type B and C coronary lesions, which present unique challenges, requi
196  in 1,226 consecutive patients (1,259 native coronary lesions) who underwent a single vessel interven
197 g patients with stable angina and at least 1 coronary lesion with a fractional flow reserve </=0.80 w
198 as equivalent to that produced by stenting a coronary lesion with an instantaneous wave-free ratio of
199                                              Coronary lesions with a diameter narrowing >/=50% on vis
200 termined in normal and atherosclerotic human coronary lesions with a monoclonal antibody to human PLT
201 staining on the luminal endothelium of human coronary lesions with active monocyte entry.
202 nical interpretation of stenosis severity in coronary lesions with an independent assessment using qu
203 icient recipients had more severe aortic and coronary lesions with characteristic T cell infiltration
204 aortic stenosis, physiological assessment of coronary lesions with FFR before transcatheter aortic va
205                                Management of coronary lesions with fractional flow reserve values in
206 ferred versus performed revascularization of coronary lesions with gray-zone fractional flow reserve
207 l versus performance of revascularization in coronary lesions with gray-zone fractional flow reserve.
208 for lesion preparation in severely calcified coronary lesions with high success rate, low procedural
209                  A consecutive series of 456 coronary lesions with in-stent restenosis was evaluated
210         In a subgroup of 210 patients, focal coronary lesions with mild luminal narrowing were identi
211 to determine CAD-RADS 4 versus CAD-RADS 3 of coronary lesions with moderate to severe calcification.
212                                       PCI of coronary lesions with reduced fractional flow reserve im
213                                  Obstructive coronary lesions with reduced luminal dimensions may res
214 utaneous revascularization of de novo native coronary lesions with reference vessel diameters between
215 atherosclerotic lesions, we studied 20 human coronary lesions with techniques that have previously be
216 rest according to the likelihood of an acute coronary lesion would have significant utility.

 
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