Literature DB >> 22421236

Adverse cardiovascular events arising from atherosclerotic lesions with and without angiographic disease progression.

Elias A Sanidas1, Gary S Mintz, Akiko Maehara, Ecaterina Cristea, Bertil Wennerblom, Andres Iñiguez, Jean Fajadet, Martin Fahy, Ovidiu Dressler, Giora Weisz, Barry Templin, Zhen Zhang, Alexandra J Lansky, Bernard de Bruyne, Patrick Serruys, Gregg W Stone.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to use angiography and grayscale and intravascular ultrasound-virtual histology to assess coronary lesions that caused events during a median follow-up period of 3.4 years.
BACKGROUND: Vulnerable plaque-related events are assumed to be the result of substantial progression of insignificant lesions.
METHODS: In the PROSPECT (Providing Regional Observations to Study Predictors of Events in the Coronary Tree) study, 697 patients with acute coronary syndromes underwent treatment of all culprit lesions followed by 3-vessel imaging to assess the natural history of culprit and untreated nonculprit (NC) lesions. Future adverse cardiovascular events adjudicated to NC lesions were divided into those with versus without substantial lesion progression (SLP) (≥ 20% angiographic diameter stenosis increase).
RESULTS: NC lesion events occurred in 72 patients, 44 (61%) with and 28 (39%) without SLP. Myocardial infarctions (n = 6) occurred only in patients with SLP. Conversely, patients without SLP presented only with unstable or increasing angina requiring rehospitalization. Lesions with versus without SLP occurred later (median time to event 401 vs. 223 days, p = 0.07); were less severe at baseline (median diameter stenosis 26.4% vs. 53.8%, p < 0.0001) but more severe at the time of the event (mean diameter stenosis 73.8% vs. 56%, p < 0.0001); and had comparable baseline median plaque burden (68.7% vs. 70.1%, p = 0.17), minimum luminal area (3.7 vs. 4.0 mm(2), p = 0.60), and intravascular ultrasound-virtual histology phenotype (83.3% vs. 90.9%, p = 0.68; classified as fibroatheromas at baseline).
CONCLUSIONS: NC lesions responsible for future cardiovascular events showed angiographic increase during 3.4 years of follow-up, whereas SLP underlay many but not all of them. NC events due to lesions with SLP were angiographically less severe and presented with a delayed time course but were otherwise indistinguishable from NC events that were not associated with SLP.
Copyright © 2012 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22421236     DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2011.08.024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Imaging        ISSN: 1876-7591


  4 in total

1.  Arterial Remodeling and Endothelial Shear Stress Exhibit Significant Longitudinal Heterogeneity Along the Length of Coronary Plaques.

Authors:  Antonios P Antoniadis; Michail I Papafaklis; Saeko Takahashi; Koki Shishido; Ioannis Andreou; Yiannis S Chatzizisis; Masaya Tsuda; Shingo Mizuno; Yasuhiro Makita; Takenori Domei; Tomokazu Ikemoto; Ahmet U Coskun; Junko Honye; Shigeru Nakamura; Shigeru Saito; Elazer R Edelman; Charles L Feldman; Peter H Stone
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2016-08

Review 2.  Imaging atherosclerosis and risk of plaque rupture.

Authors:  Eric A Osborn; Farouc A Jaffer
Journal:  Curr Atheroscler Rep       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 5.113

3.  Change in luminal diameter of the left internal thoracic artery anastomosed to the totally occluded left anterior descending coronary artery.

Authors:  Yochun Jung; Byoung Hee Ahn; Gwan Sic Kim; In Seok Jeong; Kyo Seon Lee; Sang Yun Song; Kook Joo Na; Sang Gi Oh
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 1.637

4.  Monomeric C-reactive protein affects cell injury and apoptosis through activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase in human coronary artery endothelial cells.

Authors:  Yong Zhang; Hongxia Cao
Journal:  Bosn J Basic Med Sci       Date:  2020-11-02       Impact factor: 3.363

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.