Clinical study: ultrasound coronary imaging
Morphologic and angiographic features of coronary plaque rupture detected by intravascular ultrasound

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0735-1097(02)02047-8Get rights and content
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Abstract

Objectives

This study was designed to report the clinical and angiographic correlates of plaque rupture detected by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS).

Background

Acute coronary syndromes result from spontaneous plaque rupture and thrombosis.

Methods

We report 300 plaque ruptures in 257 arteries in 254 patients. Plaque ruptures were detected during pre-intervention IVUS. Standard clinical, angiographic, and IVUS parameters were collected and/or measured. One lesion per patient was analyzed.

Results

Multiple ruptures were observed in 39 of 254 patients (15%), 36 in the same artery. Plaque rupture occurred not only in patients with unstable angina (46%) or myocardial infarction (MI, 33%), but also stable angina (11%) or no symptoms (11%). The tear in the fibrous cap could be identified in 157 of 254 patients; 63% occurred at the shoulder of the plaque and 37% in the center of the plaque. Thrombi were more common in patients with unstable angina or MI (p = 0.02) and in multiple ruptures (p = 0.04). The plaque rupture site contained the minimum lumen area (MLA) site in only 28% of patients; rupture sites had larger arterial and lumen areas and more positive remodeling than MLA sites. Intravascular ultrasound plaque rupture strongly correlated with complex angiographic lesion morphology: ulceration in 81%, intimal flap in 40%, thrombus in 7%, and aneurysm in 7%.

Conclusions

Plaque ruptures occur with varying clinical presentations, strongly correlate with angiographic complex lesion morphology, may be multiple, and usually do not cause lumen compromise.

Abbreviations

CABG
coronary artery bypass grafting
CSA
cross-sectional area
EEM
external elastic membrane
IVUS
intravascular ultrasound
MI
myocardial infarction
MLA
minimum lumen area
PCI
percutaneous coronary intervention

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