OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to assess differences in thrombus healing between ruptured and eroded plaques, given the natural difference in lesion substrate and that thrombi might exist days to weeks before the presentation of sudden coronary death. BACKGROUND: Although the ability to distinguish ruptures and erosions remains a major clinical challenge, in-hospital patients dying with acute myocardial infarction establish that erosions account for 25% of all deaths, where women experience a higher incidence compared with men. METHODS: Coronary lesions with thrombi (ruptures, n = 65; erosions, n = 50) received in consultation from the Medical Examiner's Office from 111 sudden death victims were studied. Thrombus healing was classified as early (<1 day) or late stage characterized in phases of lytic (1 to 3 days), infiltrating (4 to 7 days), or healing (>7 days). Morphometric analysis included vessel dimensions, necrotic core size, and macrophage density. RESULTS: Late-stage thrombi were identified in 79 of 115 (69%) culprit plaques. Women more frequently had erosion with a greater prevalence of late-stage thrombi (44 of 50, 88%) than ruptures (35 of 65, 54%, p < 0.0001). The internal elastic lamina area and percent stenosis were significantly smaller in erosions compared with ruptures (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.02), where plaque burden was greater (p = 0.008). Although macrophage infiltration in erosions was significantly less than ruptures (p = 0.03), there was no established relationship with thrombus organization. Other parameters of thrombus length and occlusive versus nonocclusive showed no association with healing. CONCLUSIONS: Approximately two-thirds of coronary thrombi in sudden coronary deaths are organizing, particularly in young individuals-especially women, who perhaps might require a different strategy of treatment.
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to assess differences in thrombus healing between ruptured and eroded plaques, given the natural difference in lesion substrate and that thrombi might exist days to weeks before the presentation of sudden coronary death. BACKGROUND: Although the ability to distinguish ruptures and erosions remains a major clinical challenge, in-hospital patients dying with acute myocardial infarction establish that erosions account for 25% of all deaths, where women experience a higher incidence compared with men. METHODS: Coronary lesions with thrombi (ruptures, n = 65; erosions, n = 50) received in consultation from the Medical Examiner's Office from 111 sudden death victims were studied. Thrombus healing was classified as early (<1 day) or late stage characterized in phases of lytic (1 to 3 days), infiltrating (4 to 7 days), or healing (>7 days). Morphometric analysis included vessel dimensions, necrotic core size, and macrophage density. RESULTS:Late-stage thrombi were identified in 79 of 115 (69%) culprit plaques. Women more frequently had erosion with a greater prevalence of late-stage thrombi (44 of 50, 88%) than ruptures (35 of 65, 54%, p < 0.0001). The internal elastic lamina area and percent stenosis were significantly smaller in erosions compared with ruptures (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.02), where plaque burden was greater (p = 0.008). Although macrophage infiltration in erosions was significantly less than ruptures (p = 0.03), there was no established relationship with thrombus organization. Other parameters of thrombus length and occlusive versus nonocclusive showed no association with healing. CONCLUSIONS: Approximately two-thirds of coronary thrombi in sudden coronary deaths are organizing, particularly in young individuals-especially women, who perhaps might require a different strategy of treatment.
Authors: Francesco Blasi; Bruno L Oliveira; Tyson A Rietz; Nicholas J Rotile; Pratap C Naha; David P Cormode; David Izquierdo-Garcia; Ciprian Catana; Peter Caravan Journal: Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol Date: 2015-08-13 Impact factor: 8.311
Authors: Samir Damani; Andrea Bacconi; Ondrej Libiger; Aparajita H Chourasia; Rod Serry; Raghava Gollapudi; Ron Goldberg; Kevin Rapeport; Sharon Haaser; Sarah Topol; Sharen Knowlton; Kelly Bethel; Peter Kuhn; Malcolm Wood; Bridget Carragher; Nicholas J Schork; John Jiang; Chandra Rao; Mark Connelly; Velia M Fowler; Eric J Topol Journal: Sci Transl Med Date: 2012-03-21 Impact factor: 17.956
Authors: Andrew P DeFilippis; Ilya Chernyavskiy; Alok R Amraotkar; Patrick J Trainor; Shalin Kothari; Imtiaz Ismail; Charles W Hargis; Frederick K Korley; Gregor Leibundgut; Sotirios Tsimikas; Shesh N Rai; Aruni Bhatnagar Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis Date: 2016-07 Impact factor: 2.300
Authors: Patrick J Trainor; Bradford G Hill; Samantha M Carlisle; Eric C Rouchka; Shesh N Rai; Aruni Bhatnagar; Andrew P DeFilippis Journal: J Proteomics Date: 2017-03-22 Impact factor: 4.044
Authors: Rogier A van Dijk; Frank Kolodgie; Amir Ravandi; Gregor Leibundgut; Patrick P Hu; Anand Prasad; Ehtisham Mahmud; Edward Dennis; Linda K Curtiss; Joseph L Witztum; Bruce A Wasserman; Fumiyuki Otsuka; Renu Virmani; Sotirios Tsimikas Journal: J Lipid Res Date: 2012-09-11 Impact factor: 5.922