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To determine long-term angiographic prognosis after successful angioplasty (< 50% residual stenosis, greater or equal to 20% reduction of stenosis, and no major complications), coronary angiography was performed 2 to 4 years after angioplasty in patients who were less or equal to 70 years old at the time of treatment and who showed patency (less or equal to 50% stenosis) 6 months after the initial procedure. Among 407 lesions that were dilated in 333 patients between 1983 and 1989, 298 (73.2%) lesions were reviewed by long-term angiography after 177 plus/minus 34 weeks. At long-term follow-up, 4 (1.3%) lesions were totally occluded, 3 (1.0%) had severe stenosis (greater or equal to 75% stenosis), 9 (3.0%) had mild stenosis (> 50% to < 75% stenosis), and 282 (94.6%) were patent (less or equal to 50% stenosis). The percentage of stenosis of patent lesions decreased from 24% plus/minus 14% at 6 months to 21% plus/minus 13% at long-term follow-up (p < 0.0001). No specific clinical or angiographic characteristics were identified in patients with severe stenosis at long-term follow-up. These findings indicate that when patency is obtained 6 months after angioplasty, a 95% long-term patency rate with regression of stenosis can be expected. (AM HEART J 1995;129:441-4.)

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