Objective The aim of this study was to assess quality of results of elderly patients with coronary disease after medical or revascularisation therapy. Methods In this study, we enrolled 103 patients aged 75 years or older with chronic angina in which 47 patients were assigned coronary angiography and revascularisation and 56 patients with optimised medical therapy. The primary endpoint was quality of life after 6 months, as assessed by questionnaire and the presence of major adverse cardiac events (death, non fatal myocardial infarction, or hospital admission for acute coronary syndrome with or without the need for revascularisation). Results After 6 months follow up, angina severity decreased and measures of quality of life increased in both treatment groups( P <0.05 ); however, these improvements were significantly greater after revascularisation( P <0.01 ). Major adverse cardiac events occurred in 30 ( 53.6% ) of patients in the medical group and 9 ( 19.1% ) in the invasive group ( P <0.01 ).Conclusions Patients aged 75 years or older with angina benefit more from revascularisation than from optimised medical therapy in terms of symptom relief and quality of life. Therefore, these patients should be offered invasive assessment despite their high risk profile followed by revascularisation if feasible.
Objective To analyze the clinical and angiographic characteristics associated with asymptomatic versus symptomatic restenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention(PCI).Methods One hundred and sixty eight patients who underwent percutaneous revascularization and 6 month follow up angiography were recruited from 2001 to 2002, in which Fifty nine patients with angiographic restenosis ( ≥50% diameter stenosis) were analyzed. Multivariate analysis evaluated 24 clinical and angiographic variables, comparing those with and without angina. Results Restenosis occurred in 32 patients with clinical silence (55%) and 27 patients with angina. Male sex ( P =0.03 ), absence of antianginal therapy with nitrates ( P =0.002 ) ,greater reference diameter after the procedure ( P =0.04 ), greater reference diameter at follow up (P=0.01), and less lesion severity at 6 months ( P =0.04 ) were univariate predictors of asymptomatic restenosis. By multivariate analysis, only male, greater reference diameter at follow up, and less lesion severity at 6 months were associated with restenosis without angina.Conclusions Approximately half of patients with angiographic restenosis have no symptoms. The only multivariate predictors of silent restenosis at 6 months were male sex, greater reference diameter at follow up, and less lesion severity on follow up angiography.