| Literature DB >> 2398625 |
K Hiyamuta1, H Toshima, Y Koga, H Nakayama, A Yamaga, A Shiraishi, H Maruyama, Y Hidaka, T Ueno, O Yoshiga.
Abstract
Coronary arteriography was performed in 1,029 consecutive patients with ischemic heart disease and the relationship between the arteriographic features of coronary atherosclerosis and coronary risk factors was analyzed by case control studies. Patients were divided into four groups according to coronary arteriographic findings. Patients with normal or near normal coronary arteriograms (Group I) showed a high prevalence of smoking habit and a higher value of serum uric acid compared with the control group, so smoking and hyperuricemia were considered to be the risk factors for coronary atherosclerosis in patients of group. Four selected variables: smoking, hyperuricemia, hypertension and hyperlipidemia, were identified to be risk factors for the patients with minor plaques in the coronary arteries (Group II). As in Group I, smoking and hyperuricemia had a close relationship to solitary tight plaque in a branch of the coronary artery (Group III). Multiple tight stenoses in the coronary arteries (Group IV) correlated closely with smoking, hyperuricemia, hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes mellitus. Thus, there were many strong risk factors for patients with diffuse, extended coronary atherosclerosis (Group II and Group IV), while only two factors, smoking and hyperuricemia, were considered to be risk factors for the patients with near normal coronary arteries ies or a solitary plaque in a branch of the coronary artery. These findings suggest that the role of the coronary risk factors on the pathogenesis of coronary atherosclerosis is not uniform but variable depending on the morphologic variability of the coronary atherosclerosis and on the pathophysiology of the ischemic heart disease.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2398625 DOI: 10.1253/jcj.54.442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Jpn Circ J ISSN: 0047-1828