| Literature DB >> 18246357 |
Filippo Cademartiri1, Ludovico La Grutta, Roberto Malagò, Filippo Alberghina, Willem B Meijboom, Francesca Pugliese, Erica Maffei, Anselmo Alessandro Palumbo, Annachiara Aldrovandi, Michele Fusaro, Valerio Brambilla, Paolo Coruzzi, Massimo Midiri, Nico R A Mollet, Gabriel P Krestin.
Abstract
The aim of our study was to assess the prevalence of variants and anomalies of the coronary artery tree in patients who underwent 64-slice computed tomography coronary angiography (CT-CA) for suspected or known coronary artery disease. A total of 543 patients (389 male, mean age 60.5 +/- 10.9) were reviewed for coronary artery variants and anomalies including post-processing tools. The majority of segments were identified according to the American Heart Association scheme. The coronary dominance pattern results were: right, 86.6%; left, 9.2%; balanced, 4.2%. The left main coronary artery had a mean length of 112 +/- 55 mm. The intermediate branch was present in the 21.9%. A variable number of diagonals (one, 25%; two, 49.7%; more than two, 24%; none, 1.3%) and marginals (one, 35.2%; two, 46.2%; more than two, 18%; none, 0.6%) was visualized. Furthermore, CT-CA may visualize smaller branches such as the conus branch artery (98%), the sinus node artery (91.6%), and the septal branches (93%). Single or associated coronary anomalies occurred in 18.4% of the patients, with the following distribution: 43 anomalies of origin and course, 68 intrinsic anomalies (59 myocardial bridging, nine aneurisms), three fistulas. In conclusion, 64-slice CT-CA provides optimal visualization of the variable and complex anatomy of coronary arteries because of the improved isotropic spatial resolution and flexible post-processing tool.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18246357 PMCID: PMC2270369 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-007-0821-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Our population resulted heterogeneous because of the multiethnic Dutch population
| Ethnic group | % ( |
|---|---|
| The Netherlands | 88.95 (483) |
| Middle East Asia | 3.31 (18) |
| South-East Asia | 2.94 (16) |
| East Europe | 1.84 (10) |
| South Europe | 1.10 (6) |
| South America | 0.92 (5) |
| Africa | 0.92 (5) |
Segments visualized according to the American Heart Association classification
| Segments | % ( |
|---|---|
| 1 | 99.8 (542) |
| 2 | 99.3 (539) |
| 3 | 97.8 (531) |
| 4 | 92.4 (502) |
| 5 | 95.9 (521) |
| 6 | 100 (543) |
| 7 | 100 (543) |
| 8 | 97.8 (531) |
| 9 | 98.7 (536) |
| 10 | 73.7 (400) |
| 11 | 100 (543) |
| 12 | 99.4 (540) |
| 13 | 97.2 (528) |
| 14 | 64.3 (349) |
| 15 | 72.4 (393) |
| 16a | 21.9 (119) |
aSegment 16 refers to the intermediate branch
Prevalence of coronary artery variants (RCA right coronary artery, LAD left anterior descending artery, LCX left circumflex, LM left main, ND not detected)
| Variants | Patients % ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Conus branch | From proximal RCA | 64.1 (348) |
| From ostial RCA | 22.3 (121) | |
| From aorta | 11.6 (63) | |
| ND | 2 (11) | |
| Sinus node artery | From RCA | 65.4 (355) |
| From LCX | 16.6 (90) | |
| From RCA and LCX | 9.2 (50) | |
| From LCX and pulmonary artery | 0.2 (1) | |
| From aorta | 0.2 (1) | |
| ND | 8.4 (46) | |
| LM length | <1 cm | 41.6 (226) |
| 1–2 cm | 47.3 (257) | |
| >2 cm | 7 (38) | |
| Intermediate branch | 21.9 (119) | |
| Diagonal branches from LAD | ND | 1.3 (7) |
| 1 | 25 (136) | |
| 2 | 49.7 (270) | |
| >2 | 24 (130) | |
| Septal branches from LAD | 93 (505) | |
| Marginal branches from LCX | ND | 0.6 (3) |
| 1 | 35.2 (191) | |
| 2 | 46.2 (251) | |
| >2 | 18 (98) |
Fig. 1a LM length. b The separate origin of the LAD and LCX might cause technical difficulties during coronary angioplasty due to poor visualization. c–e The LM may present variable length
Fig. 2Variable number and course of diagonal (a–c) and marginal branches (d–f).The intermediate branch courses along the anterior wall of the left ventricle with a variable pattern (g–i)
Fig. 3The variable origin of the conus branch artery (arrow): from RCA (a), in proximity with the ostium (b), and from aorta (c). The variable origin of the sinus node artery (arrowhead): from RCA (d), from LCX (e), or both pathways may be present (f)
Prevalence of coronary artery anomalies (LM left main artery, PDA posterior descending artery)
| Coronary anomalies | Patients % ( |
|---|---|
| Myocardial bridging | 10.9 (59) |
| Absent LM | 3.3 (18) |
| Rotation of the aortic root with normal coronary origin from the sinuses of Valsalva | 2.6 (14) |
| Coronary aneurysms | 1.6 (9) |
| Anomalies of origin and course | 1.5 (8) |
| Fistulas | 0.5 (3) |
| Early take-off of PDA | 0.5 (3) |
Fig. 4Examples of myocardial bridging (arrowhead). Myocardial bridging of mid-LAD displayed by MPR (a) and VR (b) images. Another case of myocardial bridging depicted by conventional angiogram in systole (c), not visualized in diastolic image (d), and clearly displayed by VR image (e)
Fig. 5Anomalies of origin and course (arrowhead). VR (a) and MIP (b) images of a LCA arising from the RCA with a septal course as confirmed by conventional angiogram (c). VR (d) and MIP (e) images of a RCA arising from the left sinus of Valsalva with an interarterial course, and corresponding conventional angiogram (f). VR (g) and cMPR (h) images of a stented retroaortic LCX arising from the right sinus of Valsalva and corresponding conventional angiogram (i)
Fig. 6Examples of coronary aneurisms. Aneurisms of LCX and LAD displayed by VR (a) and MIP (b) images, and corresponding conventional angiogram (c). Aneurisms of the RCA depicted by VR image (d) and vessel tree isolation (e), confirmed by the conventional angiogram (f)
Fig. 7Abnormal termination of coronary arteries. Fistula between the RCA and the coronary sinus depicted by VR (a), coronary tree isolation (b), and MPR images (c). Fistula between the LAD and the right ventricle displayed by VR (d) and coronary tree isolation images (e), and corresponding conventional angiogram (f)