Snapshot

DOI:

The latest on renal denervation, left ventricular recovery after TAVI, achieving complete revascularisation in ACS and more thought-provoking articles in this issue of EuroIntervention

Everywhere we turn we are confronted by an ongoing debate about the dangers – and advantages – of artificial intelligence. In the last issue, we spoke about evidence, and here, one of our articles looks at artificial intelligence and the role it could play in one aspect of our clinical lives. There is no reason to believe that hard clinical data and artificial intelligence are necessarily opposed... but we still need to be vigilant. The jury is out, and the evidence needs to be collected – what do you think?

Renal denervation in the management of hypertension

Lucas Lauder, Felix Mahfoud and colleagues present a state-of-the-art review on renal denervation in the management of hypertension, examining the rationale, evidence and current devices available today for renal denervation. They also look at the role of renal denervation in current guidelines and clinical practice, offering their recommendations for procedural safety.

See page e467

Immediate, complete revascularisation in multivessel disease acute coronary syndrome

Hala Kakar, Roberto Diletti and colleagues compare immediate and staged complete revascularisations in acute coronary syndrome patients, stratified by the number of diseased vessels. As immediate revascularisation was found to be safe in both patients with two- and three-vessel disease, an immediate approach may be an alternative to the staged approach for patients with extensive and complex vessel disease.

See page e479

Left ventricular recovery following TAVI

Available data on how left ventricular recovery after TAVI impacts mortality in patients with both severe aortic stenosis and severe left ventricular dysfunction is, for the moment, limited. In this article, Guy Witberg, Ran Kornowski and colleagues conclude that, though larger-scale studies are still needed, assessing the likelihood of left ventricular recovery is important in predicting TAVI outcome in these patients

See page e487

AI-assisted decision-making for severe aortic stenosis

Adil Salihu, Stephane Fournier and colleagues examine the ways in which large language models, and particularly ChatGPT, could be integrated into the Heart Team’s decision-making process. In this study, ChatGPT agreed with the Heart Team’s decisions 77% of the time, with variations according to treatment modality.

See page e496

Volume 20 Number 8
Apr 15, 2024
Volume 20 Number 8
View full issue

Suggested by Cory

Editorial

10.4244/EIJ-D-26-00195 Apr 6, 2026
Precision over prevalence: moving beyond binary risk stratification after PCI
Vrints C
free

Editorial

10.4244/EIJ-E-26-00002 Apr 6, 2026
Standardising the complexity of contemporary PCI
Giustino G
free

State-of-the-Art

10.4244/EIJ-D-25-00896 Apr 6, 2026
Pretreatment with antiplatelet agents in patients undergoing coronary revascularisation
Kaur G et al
free

Original Research

10.4244/EIJ-D-25-01204 Apr 6, 2026
Ischaemic and bleeding events after complex versus non-complex PCI: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Piccolo R et al

Flashlight

10.4244/EIJ-D-25-01014 Apr 6, 2026
Stent retriever-assisted coronary thrombectomy with continuous aspiration
Liabot Q et al
open access

Editorial

10.4244/EIJ-D-26-00196 Mar 16, 2026
Is the stress aortic valve index a fractional flow reserve for the stenotic aortic valve?
Kern M and Antoku D
free
X

PCR
Impact factor: 9.5
2024 Journal Citation Reports®
Science Edition (Clarivate Analytics, 2025)
Online ISSN 1969-6213 - Print ISSN 1774-024X
© 2005-2026 Europa Group - All rights reserved