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. 2017 Aug;13(3):232–243. doi: 10.2174/1573403X13666170525102618

Table 4.

Summary of various techniques used for assessing coronary physiology.

Technique Invasive /Non-invasive & Method Advantages Disadvantages
Surrogate indices of coronary/myocardial blood flow in the catheterization laboratory
Coronary flow velocity reserve
(CFVR)
Thermodilution/Doppler coronary wire Can assess coronary stenosis and microcirculation Cannot distinguish between microvascular disease and coronary stenosis
Affected by hemodynamic conditions
Fractional Flow reserve
(FFR)
Pressure sensitive coronary wire Can assess significance of coronary stenosis.
Robust evidence base for FFR guided revascularization.
Reproducible.
Cannot assess microcirculation. Influenced by conditions causing high microvascular resistance
Instantaneous wave_Free ratio
(iFR)
Pressure sensitive coronary wire Good correlation with FFR at extreme values of FFR at assessing coronary stenoses.
Avoids the use of adenosine. Recent large trials prove non-inferiority with FFR
Cannot assess microcirculation. Not very accurate at intermediate values of FFR.
Index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR) Thermodilution Can assess microcirculation. Cannot assess coronary stenoses.
Non-invasive methods of myocardial flow quantification
Positron emission tomography (PET) Non-invasive, uses radioactive tracer Able to quantify regional myocardial blood flow accurately Limited clinical utility as not available for decision making in the catheterization laboratory.
Not widely available
Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) Non-invasive, no ionizing radiation High spatial resolution.
CMR sequences have been shown to be able to calculate myocardial blood flow.
Non-volumetric ventricular imaging, relatively complex post processing steps. Limited clinical utility as not available in the catheterization laboratory.
Still a research tool.
Invasive methods of coronary flow quantification in the catheterization laboratory
TIMI myocardial perfusion grade (TMPG) Invasive but no need for coronary wire Easily available, semi-quantitative tool for assessing myocardial perfusion. Can be subjective. It is a crude method
Doppler wire method of coronary flow calculation Doppler coronary wire Coronary flow calculation using flow velocity from Doppler wire Operator dependent.
Lacks reproducibility
Thermodilution method of volumetric coronary flow measurement Continuous thermodilution Volumetric coronary blood flow measurements Cannot distinguish between coronary stenosis and micro circulation. Need for specially designed infusion catheter