0% found this document useful (0 votes)
343 views15 pages

Understanding the Concertina Effect

The concertina effect occurs when a stiff guidewire straightens a tortuous vessel during percutaneous coronary intervention, inducing transient angiographic narrowings. Lesions that appear after guidewire placement and disappear upon withdrawal are known as pseudolesions. This effect is caused by the straightening of tortuous arteries by stiff guidewires and is more likely in vessels with increased tortuosity. Recognition of this phenomenon is important to avoid unnecessary interventions.

Uploaded by

Akif Ahamad
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
343 views15 pages

Understanding the Concertina Effect

The concertina effect occurs when a stiff guidewire straightens a tortuous vessel during percutaneous coronary intervention, inducing transient angiographic narrowings. Lesions that appear after guidewire placement and disappear upon withdrawal are known as pseudolesions. This effect is caused by the straightening of tortuous arteries by stiff guidewires and is more likely in vessels with increased tortuosity. Recognition of this phenomenon is important to avoid unnecessary interventions.

Uploaded by

Akif Ahamad
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Concertina Effect

- Dr. Akif Baig


• Concertina phenomenon is a transient
angiographic series of narrowings during
percutaneous coronary intervention in a
tortuous vessel induced mainly by a stiff guide
wire
• Lesions or stenoses that appear after placement
of the interventional guidewire in a tortuous
artery and disappear when the wire is withdrawn
are known as pseudolesions

• This effect is known as the accordion effect or


concertina effect

• They are produced by straightening of the


tortuous vessel by the guide wire
Risk Factors
• Increased tortuosity of the vessels and the use
of stiff interventional guide wires are the two
most important risk factors to bring forth this
phenomenon.
• Tortuosity of the vessel, which might be
related to atherosclerosis, ageing or
hypertension, is essential for this
phenomenon to occur, as we do not
encounter this in relatively straight coronary
arteries
• Another important factor is the stiffness of
the interventional wire

• The stiffer or heavier the wire is the more


pronounced the effect
Mechanism
• Straightening of the tortuous coronary artery
by a ‘‘stiff’’ guide wire results in invagination
and beading appearance of the vessel

• The morphology of the affected segment looks


like spasm followed by an ultra short normal
segment followed by spasm and so on giving
the impression of beads
• This phenomenon should be well recognized
as the alternative diagnoses which include
dissection, thrombosis and spasm dictate
unnecessary actions or even harmful
interventions such as stent placement or
aggressive antithrombotic therapy
• Theoretically, any vessel maybe affected

• Most case reports in the literature described


this phenomenon in the coronary arteries;
specifically the RCA or the left internal
mammary arteries
• It is of paramount importance to recognize the
anatomy of the blood vessel with the first
injection before placement of the interventional
guide wire

• Such change happens after the guide wire has


been placed distally

• Interestingly, the affected arterial segment


returns to normal immediately after guide wire
withdrawal

You might also like