The effect of PTCA on chronically impaired, regional wall motion was studied in 40 patients with stable angina and stenoses in the left anterior descending artery. Left-ventricular angiograms were obtained before, 15 min after PTCA and, additionally, in eight patients 15 +/- 5 weeks after PTCA. Left-ventricular ejection fraction and regional myocardial function were assessed by the centerline method. Patients with no (n = 18) or non-Q-wave (n = 12) infarction were compared to patients with Q-wave infarction (n = 10). After PTCA, ejection fraction increased from 54 +/- 8% to 59 +/- 8% (p less than 0.05) and regional function improved significantly (maximal standard deviation before PTCA: 2.8 +/- 0.8; after PTCA: 1.9 +/- 0.9- segments below the first standard deviation before PTCA: 31 +/- 16; after PTCA: 19 +/- 17). The improvements were found in patients with no or non-Q-wave infarction. The benefit on regional function was unchanged at follow-up.
Conclusions: PTCA reduced chronic regional myocardial dysfunction in 78% of the patients with stable angina within 15 min. Reversible myocardial dysfunction is most likely related to hibernating myocardium.