Literature DB >> 23106903

Predominant microvessel proliferation in coronary stent restenotic tissue in patients with diabetes: insights from optical coherence tomography image analysis.

Nobuaki Suzuki1, Ken Kozuma, Hiroyuki Kyono, Shuji Otsuki, Qiang Fu, Naoyoshi Hosogoe, Tomohisa Saito, Kazuya Naito, Mina Ochiai, Shuichi Ishikawa, Hidenori Watanabe, Akiyoshi Miyazawa, Kazuhiro Eto, Takaaki Isshiki.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coronary optical coherence tomography (OCT) enables virtual depiction of histological findings of in-stent restenotic tissue. The aim of this study was to investigate the microvessel proliferation within in-stent restenotic tissue and the influence of diabetes mellitus (DM).
METHODS: We examined 54 in-stent restenotic coronary artery lesions (stenotic area>50%) from 50 consecutive patients including 28 with DM (56%) and 9 insulin-treated DM patients (18%); who underwent coronary time-domain OCT imaging with automatic pull back (1mm/s, 20 frames/s). Microvessels were defined as low-signal cavities with a diameter of 50-150 microns and a trajectory parallel to the lumen recognized on 3 consecutive cross-sectional OCT image frames. The microvessel index was calculated as the number of frames with microvessel/total number of frames × 100. Patients were stratified into 3 groups: 1) without microvessels, 2) with a low (< median value) microvessel index, 3) with a high microvessel index.
RESULTS: Microvessels were detected in 566 frames (3.1%) from 26 lesions (48%) in 24 patients (48%). A greater incidence of DM and higher serum glucose levels were observed in the high microvessel index group (DM: 42% vs 58% vs 83%, p=0.049; serum glucose level: 118.2 ± 44.6 vs 122.6 ± 31.0 vs 172.8 ± 63.1mg/dL, p=0.03 between low and high microvessel index group, p=0.005 between no microvessel and high microvessel index group).
CONCLUSIONS: Microvessel formation may be a unique pathophysiological factor of in-stent restenoses in patients with DM.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Coronary artery; Diabetes mellitus; Stent

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23106903     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2012.10.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cardiol        ISSN: 0167-5273            Impact factor:   4.164


  3 in total

1.  Five factors and three characteristics of coronary in-stent restenosis.

Authors:  Nobuaki Suzuki
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 2.895

2.  Efficacy of Zotarolimus-Eluting Stents in Treating Diabetic Coronary Lesions: An Optical Coherence Tomography Study.

Authors:  Zhengbin Zhu; Jinzhou Zhu; Run Du; Haotian Zhang; Jinwei Ni; Weiwei Quan; Jian Hu; Fenghua Ding; Zhenkun Yang; Ruiyan Zhang
Journal:  Adv Ther       Date:  2020-03-07       Impact factor: 3.845

3.  Optical coherence tomographic analysis of drug-eluting in-stent restenosis at different times: A STROBE compliant study.

Authors:  Chunguang Feng; Peiying Zhang; Bing Han; Xianchi Li; Yi Liu; Dongdong Niu; Yibing Shi
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 1.817

  3 in total

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