Practice Point

Nature Clinical Practice Cardiovascular Medicine (2006) 3, 132-133
doi:10.1038/ncpcardio0481  
Received 6 November 2005 | Accepted 13 December 2005

Should fractional flow reserve be used to decide whether to perform percutaneous coronary intervention?

Volker Klauss

Correspondence Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Munich, Ziemssenstrasse 1, 80336 Munich, Germany

Email
 klauss@med.uni-muenchen.de

This article has no abstract so we have provided the first paragraph of the full text.

The decision of whether to perform PCI in patients with stable coronary artery disease should be based on objective signs of ischemia. In clinical practice, the symptoms of patients with suspected or known coronary artery disease are often not typical, and conclusive stress tests are not always available or are not performed. Thus, many patients undergo an interventional procedure based solely on the morphologic criteria of a coronary angiogram.

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