OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to report the clinical and angiographic correlates of plaque rupture detected by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). BACKGROUND: Acute coronary syndromes result from spontaneous plaque rupture and thrombosis. METHODS: We report 300 plaque ruptures in 257 arteries in 254 patients. Plaque ruptures were detected during pre-intervention IVUS. Standard clinical, angiographic, and IVUS parameters were collected and/or measured. One lesion per patient was analyzed. RESULTS: Multiple ruptures were observed in 39 of 254 patients (15%), 36 in the same artery. Plaque rupture occurred not only in patients with unstable angina (46%) or myocardial infarction (MI, 33%), but also stable angina (11%) or no symptoms (11%). The tear in the fibrous cap could be identified in 157 of 254 patients; 63% occurred at the shoulder of the plaque and 37% in the center of the plaque. Thrombi were more common in patients with unstable angina or MI (p = 0.02) and in multiple ruptures (p = 0.04). The plaque rupture site contained the minimum lumen area (MLA) site in only 28% of patients; rupture sites had larger arterial and lumen areas and more positive remodeling than MLA sites. Intravascular ultrasound plaque rupture strongly correlated with complex angiographic lesion morphology: ulceration in 81%, intimal flap in 40%, thrombus in 7%, and aneurysm in 7%. CONCLUSIONS: Plaque ruptures occur with varying clinical presentations, strongly correlate with angiographic complex lesion morphology, may be multiple, and usually do not cause lumen compromise.
OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to report the clinical and angiographic correlates of plaque rupture detected by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). BACKGROUND: Acute coronary syndromes result from spontaneous plaque rupture and thrombosis. METHODS: We report 300 plaque ruptures in 257 arteries in 254 patients. Plaque ruptures were detected during pre-intervention IVUS. Standard clinical, angiographic, and IVUS parameters were collected and/or measured. One lesion per patient was analyzed. RESULTS: Multiple ruptures were observed in 39 of 254 patients (15%), 36 in the same artery. Plaque rupture occurred not only in patients with unstable angina (46%) or myocardial infarction (MI, 33%), but also stable angina (11%) or no symptoms (11%). The tear in the fibrous cap could be identified in 157 of 254 patients; 63% occurred at the shoulder of the plaque and 37% in the center of the plaque. Thrombi were more common in patients with unstable angina or MI (p = 0.02) and in multiple ruptures (p = 0.04). The plaque rupture site contained the minimum lumen area (MLA) site in only 28% of patients; rupture sites had larger arterial and lumen areas and more positive remodeling than MLA sites. Intravascular ultrasound plaque rupture strongly correlated with complex angiographic lesion morphology: ulceration in 81%, intimal flap in 40%, thrombus in 7%, and aneurysm in 7%. CONCLUSIONS: Plaque ruptures occur with varying clinical presentations, strongly correlate with angiographic complex lesion morphology, may be multiple, and usually do not cause lumen compromise.
Authors: Xinlei Wu; Clemens von Birgelen; Zehang Li; Su Zhang; Jiayue Huang; Fuyou Liang; Yingguang Li; William Wijns; Shengxian Tu Journal: Int J Cardiovasc Imaging Date: 2018-02-03 Impact factor: 2.357
Authors: Sangpil Yoon; Jay Williams; Bong Jin Kang; Changhan Yoon; Nestor Cabrera-Munoz; Jong Seob Jeong; Sang Goo Lee; K Kirk Shung; Hyung Ham Kim Journal: Sens Actuators A Phys Date: 2015-06-01 Impact factor: 3.407