Does the severity of coronary stenosis on initial angiography predict the site of a subsequent myocardial infarction?
42 consecutive patients with mild-to-moderate coronary artery disease who underwent coronary angiography both before and up to a month after suffering an acute myocardial infarction.
Coronary angiography to assess the severity of initial coronary stenosis.
Site of subsequent coronary occlusion producing a myocardial infarction.surrogate
The angiographic severity of coronary stenosis is inadequate to accurately predict the location of a subsequent coronary occlusion causing a myocardial infarction, as most occlusions occur at sites with initially mild (<50%) stenosis.
To help determine if coronary angiography can predict the site of a future coronary occlusion that will produce a myocardial infarction, the coronary angiograms of 42 consecutive patients who had undergone coronary angiography both before and up to a month after suffering an acute myocardial infarction were evaluated. Twenty-nine patients had a newly occluded coronary artery. Twenty-five of these 29 patients had at least one artery with a greater than 50% stenosis on the initial angiogram. However, in 19 of 29 (66%) patients, the artery that subsequently occluded had less than a 50% stenosis on the first angiogram, and in 28 of 29 (97%), the stenosis was less than 70%. In every patient, at least some irregularity of the coronary wall was present on the first angiogram at the site of the subsequent coronary obstruction. In only 10 of the 29 (34%) did the infarction occur due to occlusion of the artery that previously contained the most severe stenosis. Furthermore, no correlation existed between the severity of the initial coronary stenosis and the time from the first catheterization until the infarction (r2 = 0.0005, p = NS). These data suggest that assessment of the angiographic severity of coronary stenosis may be inadequate to accurately predict the time or location of a subsequent coronary occlusion that will produce a myocardial infarction.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
William C. Little
Interventional Cardiology
M Constantinescu
Grigore T. Popa University of Medicine and Pharmacy
Robert J. Applegate
Interventional Cardiology
Circulation
Wake Forest University
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Little et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69eede42a84321e0ae63c38c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.78.5.1157