Computed Tomography Coronary Angiography in Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction without Significant Coronary Stenosis.

Link to article at PubMed

Computed Tomography Coronary Angiography in Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction without Significant Coronary Stenosis.

Circulation. 2012 Nov 20;

Authors: Aldrovandi A, Cademartiri F, Arduini D, Lina D, Ugo F, Maffei E, Menozzi A, Martini C, Palumbo A, Bontardelli F, Gherli T, Ruffini L, Ardissino D

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is known that 9-31% of women and 4-14% of men experiencing an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have normal coronary arteries or non-significant coronary disease at angiography. Computed tomography coronary angiography (CTCA) can non-invasively identify the presence of coronary plaques even in the absence of significant coronary artery stenosis. This study evaluated the role of 64-slice CTCA in detecting and characterising coronary atherosclerosis in patients with a documented AMI but without significant coronary artery stenosis. METHODS AND RESULTS: Consecutive patients with AMI but without significant coronary stenosis at coronary angiography (CA) underwent late gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) and CTCA. Only the 50 patients with an area of MI identified by LGE-CMR were included in the study. All of the coronary segments were assessed for the presence of coronary plaques. CTCA identified 101 plaques against the 41 identified by CA: 61 (60.4%) located in infarct-related arteries (IRAs) and 40 (39.6%) in non-IRAs. In the IRAs, 22 plaques were non-calcified, 17 mixed, and 22 calcified; in the non-IRAs, five plaques were non-calcified, eight mixed, and 27 calcified (p=0.005). Mean plaque area was significantly greater in the IRAs than in the non-IRAs (6.1±5.4 mm(2) vs 4.2±2.1 mm(2), p=0.03); there was no significant difference in mean percentage stenosis (33.5%±14.6 vs 31.7%±12.2, p=0.59), but the mean remodelling index was significantly different (1.25±0.41 vs 1.08±0.21, p=0.01). CONCLUSIONS: CTCA detects coronary atherosclerotic plaques in segments of non-stenotic coronary arteries that are underestimated by CA, and identifies a different distribution of plaque types in IRAs and non-IRAs. It may therefore be valuable for diagnosing coronary atherosclerosis in AMI patients without any significant coronary stenosis.

PMID: 23168414 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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