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J Cardiol. 1998 Aug;32(2):101-5.

[Coronary angiography provides considerable in vivo pathophysiological information on coronary artery disease].

Journal of cardiology

[Article in Japanese]
Y Koiwaya, H Doi, T Nagoshi, T Eto

Affiliations

  1. First Department of Internal Medicine, Miyazaki Medical College.

PMID: 9752619

Abstract

Coronary cineangiography (CAG) has various limitations and pitfalls, but is widely accepted for evaluating coronary circulation. The interpretation of CAG focuses mainly on the extent and location of coronary artery disease. However, CAG can also provide considerable and varied in vivo pathophysiological information on coronary artery disease as follows: Certain in vivo angiographic coronary morphologies are indicative of histological findings, such as ruptured atheromatous plaque with/without overlying thrombus. Such morphologies are commonly found in patent ischemia- or infarct-related arteries of patients with acute coronary events in both the acute phase and one month after standard medication, and the diseased portion with the morphology is highly specific to the culprit site. The rupture of plaque and overlaid thrombus is just as important in patients with acute coronary events who survive as in patients who die. Diseased sites with complex lesions are prone to progress toward clinical ischemic episodes. The severity of coronary narrowing immediately after acute coronary events does not influence later left ventricular function if antegrade coronary blood flow without distal filling delay is preserved. Coronary stenosis induced by plaque rupture and superimposed thrombus is likely to improve or disappear with time and/or anticoagulant administration with/without antiplatelet therapy. Such information derived from CAG may improve the understanding and suggest optimal therapeutic strategies of coronary artery disease for individual patients.

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