| Literature DB >> 31471830 |
Floor Groepenhoff1, Sophie H Bots2, Elise L Kessler2, Ariane A Sickinghe2, Anouk L M Eikendal2, Tim Leiner3, Hester M den Ruijter4.
Abstract
Sex differences in coronary artery disease (CAD) are well established, with women presenting with non-obstructive CAD more often than men do. However, recent evidence has identified coronary microvascular dysfunction as the underlying cause for cardiac complaints, yet sex-specific prevalence numbers are inconclusive. This review summarises known sex-specific aspects in the pathophysiology of both macro- and microvascular dysfunction and identifies currently existing knowledge gaps. In addition, this review describes current diagnostic approaches and whether these should take underlying sex differences into account by, for example, using different techniques or cut-off values for women and men. Future research into both innovation of imaging techniques and perfusion-related sex differences is needed to fill evidence gaps and enable the implementation of the available knowledge in daily clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Coronary artery disease; Coronary flow reserve (CFR); Coronary imaging; Fractional flow reserve; Index of microcirculatory resistance; Microvascular disease; Microvascular dysfunction; Sex differences
Year: 2019 PMID: 31471830 PMCID: PMC7010630 DOI: 10.1007/s12265-019-09906-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Transl Res ISSN: 1937-5387 Impact factor: 4.132
Sex differences in currently available parameters to quantify coronary perfusion
| Parameter name (abbreviation) | Method used to calculate perfusion | Imaging modalities using this parameter to quantify perfusion | Sex differences |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fractional flow reserve (FFR) | Pd/Pa at maximal hyperaemia | CAG | None reported [ |
| Index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR) | Pd/absolute coronary flow at maximal hyperaemia | CAG | None reported [ |
| Coronary flow reserve (CFR) | Hyperaemic coronary flow/basal coronary flow | CAG, PET, echocardiography, CMR | Ratio possibly lower in women [ |
| Myocardial blood flow (MBF) | Absolute myocardial perfusion in mL/min/g | PET, CMR | Rest and stress MBF higher in women. MBF ratio lower in women [ |
| Myocardial perfusion reserve index (MPRI) | Myocardial perfusion in stress/myocardial perfusion in rest | CMR | Not yet reported |
CAG coronary angiography, CMR cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, P mean proximal coronary artery pressure (mean aortic pressure), PET positron emission tomography, P mean distal coronary artery pressure