| Literature DB >> 19650901 |
Dalin Tang1, Zhongzhao Teng, Gador Canton, Thomas S Hatsukami, Li Dong, Xueying Huang, Chun Yuan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is believed that mechanical stresses play an important role in atherosclerotic plaque rupture process and may be used for better plaque vulnerability assessment and rupture risk predictions. Image-based plaque models have been introduced in recent years to perform mechanical stress analysis and identify critical stress indicators which may be linked to rupture risk. However, large-scale studies based on in vivo patient data combining mechanical stress analysis, plaque morphology and composition for carotid plaque vulnerability assessment are lacking in the current literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19650901 PMCID: PMC2727515 DOI: 10.1186/1475-925X-8-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Eng Online ISSN: 1475-925X Impact factor: 2.819
Figure 1(a) ; (b) Segmented contour plots showing plaque components (Black: Lumen, vessel wall or calcification; Magenta: Lipid core; Red: Ulcer); (c): Rendered 3D view using the segmented contours; (d): Band plot of maximal principal stress (Stress-P1) of corresponding slices; CPSI values were calculated based on critical Stress-P1 values at critical sites, following procedures described in the paper.
Morphological plaque vulnerability index (MPSI) classifications and comparison with AHA classifications
| 0 | I or II | Normal or nearly normal wall. | Very stable |
| 1 | III | Moderate intimal thickening, no extracellular lipid, calcification or significant inflammation. | Stable |
| 2 | IV/V with less than 30% NC by area; or VII; or VIII | Advanced lesion with small necrotic core (<30% of plaque size), or can be fibrotic or calcified, thick fibrous cap (> 200 μm). | Slightly unstable |
| 3 | IV/V with 30–40% NC by area | Advanced lesion with Moderate lipid core (30–40% of plaque size) and fibrous cap (150–200 μm). | Moderately unstable |
| 4 | IV/V with > 40% NC by area; or VI | Advanced lesion with a very large necrotic core (>40%), thin fibrous cap (<150 μm), or with fibrous cap rupture, ulceration, or intraplaque hemorrhage. | Very unstable |
Quantitative plaque lipid core size and cap thickness information will be based on plaque component contour information in this paper. In particular, plaque cap thickness will be calculated as the shortest distance between a lipid core and lumen, while the thin plaque cap may not be directly measurable by MRI.
Case distributions according to MPSI and agreement rate between CPSI and MPSI
| 0 | 33 | 16.02 | 100 |
| 1 | 45 | 21.84 | 64.44 |
| 2 | 42 | 20.39 | 57.14 |
| 3 | 40 | 19.42 | 57.50 |
| 4 | 46 | 22.33 | 82.61 |
Figure 2Geometry and Stress-P. Patient pressure: Pmean = 121.5 mmHg. Shrinkage: Inner wall: 14%; Outer wall: 5.8%. Maximum Stress-P1 over-estimation without pre-shrink: 21%.
Figure 3Critical stress values correlate much better with MPSI than global maximum values of Stress-P.
Figure 4Critical stress values correlated with cap thickness at critical site negatively (Pearson correlation coefficient r = 0.3953) and normalized lipid index positively(r = 0.3879). No correlation between critical stresses and the normalized wall index was found (r = 0.0444).
Figure 5Stress-P.