Guide extension proximal locking method: standardization of maximum backup force in percutaneous coronary intervention

CARDIOVASCULAR INTERVENTION AND THERAPEUTICS(2023)

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Abstract
We developed the smallest diameter guide-extension catheter (GUIDE PLUS® 5Fr) to enable a new technique, the guide-extension proximal locking method (GP-Lock), and assessed its efficacy in the present experimental and clinical study. Sufficient guide catheter backup is sometimes crucial for PCI. We developed the KIWAMI-Lock direct anchoring method to obtain the strongest backup force by locking a Kiwami® 4Fr child catheter (Terumo Corp. Tokyo, Japan) directly to the coronary artery by ballooning from outside the child catheter. However, this method is complicated due to the requirement for a child catheter. We compared the backup power of the GP-Lock method and other conventional methods in an experimental study and compared the procedural outcomes of 17 cases treated using the initial GP-Lock method with 17 cases using the recent KIWAMI-Lock method before GP-Lock. The GP-Lock method had the highest backup force among the methods examined (GP-Lock: 293.7 ± 10.2 g force (gf), KIWAMI-Lock: 270.4 ± 12.9 gf, side branch balloon anchoring technique: 182.7 ± 8.1 gf, respectively, P < 0.0001). The preparation time was significantly shorter for the GP-Lock group than the KIWAMI-Lock group (5.0 [4.0, 5.0] min vs. 11.0 [8.0, 13.0] min, respectively, P < 0.001). The GP-Lock method makes it possible to easily obtain the strongest backup force, which can overcome situations where devices cannot pass through, especially in complex PCI procedures.
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Key words
Percutaneous coronary intervention,Backup force,Guide extension catheter
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