Type II eccentric lesions were significantly more frequent in angina-producing arteries of patients with unstable angina (70.7%) compared to those with stable angina (16.0%; p<0.0001).
Observational
Does the angiographic morphology of coronary artery lesions differ between patients with stable and unstable angina?
110 patients with either stable (n=47) or unstable (n=63) angina undergoing coronary angiography.
Qualitative assessment of coronary artery lesion morphology (concentric, type I eccentric, type II eccentric, multiple irregular).
Comparison between stable and unstable angina patients.
Frequency of different morphologic types of coronary artery lesions (≥50% luminal diameter reduction).surrogate
Type II eccentric lesions are strongly associated with unstable angina, suggesting they may represent ruptured atherosclerotic plaques or partially occlusive thrombi.
In 110 patients with either stable or unstable angina, the morphology of coronary artery lesions was qualitatively assessed at angiography. Each obstruction reducing the luminal diameter of the vessel by 50% or greater was categorized into one of the following morphologic groups: concentric (symmetric narrowing); type I eccentric (asymmetric narrowing with smooth borders and a broad neck); type II eccentric (asymmetric with a narrow neck or irregular borders, or both); and multiple irregular coronary narrowings in series. For the entire group, type II eccentric lesions were significantly more frequent in the 63 patients with unstable angina (p less than 0.001), whereas concentric and type I eccentric lesions were seen more frequently in the 47 patients with stable angina (p less than 0.05). Type II eccentric lesions were also present in 29 of 41 arteries in patients with unstable angina compared with 4 of 25 arteries in those with stable angina (p less than 0.0001) in whom an "angina-producing" artery could be identified. Therefore, type II eccentric lesions are frequent in patients with unstable angina and probably represent ruptured atherosclerotic plaques or partially occlusive thrombi, or both. A temporary decrease in coronary perfusion secondary to these plaques with or without superimposed transient platelet thrombi or altered vasomotor tone may be responsible for chest pain in some of these patients with unstable angina.
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John A. Ambrose
Stephen L. Winters
Audrey Stern
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
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Ambrose et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Stable or unstable angina (n=110). Unstable angina vs. Stable angina was evaluated on Frequency of type II eccentric lesions in angina-producing arteries (p=<0.0001). Type II eccentric lesions were significantly more frequent in angina-producing arteries of patients with unstable angina (70.7%) compared to those with stable angina (16.0%; p<0.0001).
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e9e408f7325a04e8c2e03c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0735-1097(85)80384-3