IVUS – LM & Bifurcation MCQs – What we should know
IVUS — Ultra–High-Difficulty MCQs (LM & Bifurcation, Trial‑Heavy)
IVUS in Left Main & Bifurcation PCI — 50 FAQs
Basics & Principles
- What is IVUS?
Intravascular ultrasound is an intracoronary imaging modality that provides cross-sectional vessel anatomy using ultrasound. - Why is IVUS preferred in left main disease?
Because angiography underestimates plaque due to positive remodeling, and IVUS shows true vessel size (EEM). - What does EEM represent on IVUS?
External elastic membrane area represents the true vessel size. - What is plaque burden on IVUS?
(Plaque + media area / EEM area) × 100. - What plaque burden indicates high risk?
≥70% plaque burden is associated with adverse outcomes.
Left Main Cut-offs
- What IVUS MLA safely allows deferral of LM revascularization?
≥6.0 mm² (LITRO trial). - What LM MLA is clearly significant?
<4.5 mm² is generally hemodynamically significant. - What is the LM gray zone MLA?
4.5–6.0 mm². - Which LM segment usually has the smallest MLA?
Distal left main bifurcation. - Why is physiology still useful in LM disease?
IVUS gives anatomy; FFR/iFR confirm functional significance.
Bifurcation-Specific Concepts
- Why is IVUS critical in bifurcation PCI?
It defines plaque distribution and predicts carina shift. - Which IVUS parameter predicts side-branch compromise?
Side-branch minimal lumen area (MLA). - What SB MLA suggests high risk of compromise?
<3.5–4.0 mm² (context dependent). - What does IVUS guide in proximal optimization technique (POT)?
True proximal vessel diameter based on EEM. - Which reference should be used for POT sizing?
Proximal EEM diameter, not angiography.
PCI Optimization
- What is the strongest IVUS predictor of stent failure?
Stent under-expansion. - What is the target MSA for LM PCI?
Approximately ≥8–9 mm² (segment dependent). - What is the target MSA for non-LM PCI?
≥5.0–5.5 mm². - What stent expansion percentage is considered adequate?
≥90% of the reference lumen area. - Is mild malapposition always clinically significant?
No, isolated mild malapposition is often benign.
Calcification & Lesion Preparation
- How does IVUS identify calcium?
Hyperechoic arc with acoustic shadowing. - Why is IVUS useful in calcified LM lesions?
It defines calcium arc and depth to plan atherectomy or IVL. - What calcium arc suggests need for plaque modification?
180° arc, especially with thick calcium.
- Can IVUS measure calcium thickness accurately?
Limited; OCT is superior for thickness measurement. - Which modality is preferred for calcium depth assessment?
IVUS.
Trials & Evidence
- Which trial validated IVUS-guided LM deferral?
LITRO trial. - Which trial showed reduced MACE with IVUS-guided PCI?
ULTIMATE trial. - Which trial focused on long lesions and IVUS guidance?
IVUS-XPL trial. - Which registry showed reduced stent thrombosis with IVUS?
ADAPT-DES. - Which bifurcation trial benefits from IVUS optimization?
DK-CRUSH trials.
IVUS vs OCT
- Why is OCT less suitable for LM disease?
Poor EEM visualization and need for contrast flush. - Which modality has higher resolution?
OCT. - Which modality has greater tissue penetration?
IVUS. - Which modality is better for stent malapposition?
OCT. - Which modality is safer in renal dysfunction?
IVUS.
In-Stent Restenosis (ISR)
- What can IVUS differentiate in ISR?
Under-expansion vs neoatherosclerosis. - Which ISR mechanism is mechanical?
Under-expanded stent. - Which ISR mechanism is biological?
Neoatherosclerosis. - Why is IVUS important in LM ISR?
Guides treatment strategy by identifying failure mechanism. - Can IVUS detect late-acquired malapposition?
Yes, often due to positive remodeling.
Practical & Guideline-Based
- When should IVUS be used in LM PCI?
Both pre-PCI and post-PCI. - ESC guideline class for IVUS-guided PCI in complex lesions?
Class IIa. - Is IVUS mandatory for LM PCI?
Strongly recommended, though not mandatory. - Does IVUS increase procedure time significantly?
No, usually modest increase with experience. - Does IVUS reduce contrast use?
Yes, by reducing repeat angiographic injections.
Exam & Viva Pearls
- Single most important principle of IVUS-guided PCI?
Adequate stent expansion. - Most common angiographic error corrected by IVUS?
Stent undersizing. - Why does angiography underestimate LM disease?
Positive remodeling. - Best modality to size LM stents accurately?
IVUS. - Key exam takeaway comparing IVUS vs OCT?
IVUS = vessel size & plaque burden; OCT = surface detail & stent biology.
IVUS in Left Main & Bifurcation PCI — 50 One-Liners (NEET SS / DM)
- IVUS provides true vessel size by visualizing the external elastic membrane (EEM).
- Angiography underestimates left main disease due to positive remodeling.
- Left main MLA ≥6.0 mm² allows safe deferral of revascularization (LITRO trial).
- Left main MLA <4.5 mm² is generally hemodynamically significant.
- The gray zone for left main MLA lies between 4.5 and 6.0 mm².
- Plaque burden ≥70% on IVUS is associated with high-risk coronary lesions.
- IVUS plaque burden is calculated as (plaque + media)/EEM area ×100.
- Distal left main is the most frequent site of minimal lumen area.
- IVUS correlates better with FFR than angiography in left main disease.
- IVUS is preferred over OCT for left main imaging due to superior penetration.
- In bifurcation PCI, IVUS defines plaque distribution and predicts carina shift.
- Side-branch MLA on IVUS predicts risk of side-branch compromise.
- Side-branch MLA <3.5–4.0 mm² suggests higher risk after main-branch stenting.
- Proximal Optimization Technique (POT) sizing should be based on proximal EEM.
- IVUS is the best modality to guide POT in left main bifurcation PCI.
- Stent under-expansion is the strongest IVUS predictor of restenosis and thrombosis.
- Adequate stent expansion is defined as ≥90% of reference lumen area.
- Target minimal stent area in left main PCI is approximately ≥8–9 mm².
- Target minimal stent area in non-left-main PCI is ≥5.0–5.5 mm².
- Isolated mild stent malapposition is often clinically benign.
- IVUS detects calcium as a hyperechoic arc with acoustic shadowing.
- Calcium arc >180° on IVUS suggests need for plaque modification.
- IVUS is superior to OCT for assessing calcium depth.
- OCT is superior to IVUS for measuring calcium thickness.
- IVUS guides selection of atherectomy or intravascular lithotripsy.
- IVUS differentiates mechanical from biological causes of in-stent restenosis.
- Under-expanded stent is a mechanical cause of ISR.
- Neoatherosclerosis is a biological cause of ISR.
- Late-acquired stent malapposition is often due to positive remodeling.
- IVUS is essential in evaluating left main in-stent restenosis.
- The LITRO trial validated IVUS-guided deferral of left main PCI.
- The ULTIMATE trial showed reduced MACE with IVUS-guided PCI.
- The IVUS-XPL trial demonstrated benefit in long coronary lesions.
- ADAPT-DES showed reduced stent thrombosis with IVUS guidance.
- IVUS optimization improves outcomes in DK-CRUSH bifurcation techniques.
- IVUS is recommended both before and after left main PCI.
- ESC guidelines give IVUS-guided PCI a Class IIa recommendation in complex lesions.
- IVUS reduces contrast usage compared with angiography-guided PCI alone.
- IVUS is safer than OCT in patients with renal dysfunction.
- OCT requires contrast for blood clearance, IVUS does not.
- IVUS axial resolution is approximately 100–150 μm.
- OCT axial resolution is approximately 10–20 μm.
- IVUS is preferred for ostial and proximal coronary lesions.
- OCT is preferred for detailed stent edge and malapposition assessment.
- IVUS is superior for imaging long lesions and chronic total occlusions.
- The single most important principle of IVUS-guided PCI is optimal stent expansion.
- Most angiographic sizing errors are corrected by IVUS.
- IVUS improves procedural planning in complex coronary anatomy.
- IVUS complements, but does not replace, physiological assessment.
- For NEET SS / DM exams: IVUS equals vessel sizing and plaque burden, OCT equals stent detail.


