INTRAVASCULAR ULTRASOUND EVIDENCE OF ANGIOGRAPHICALLY UNDETECTED LEFTMAIN CORONARY-ARTERY DISEASE AND ASSOCIATED TRAUMA DURING INTERVENTIONAL PROCEDURES
M. Yamagishi et al., INTRAVASCULAR ULTRASOUND EVIDENCE OF ANGIOGRAPHICALLY UNDETECTED LEFTMAIN CORONARY-ARTERY DISEASE AND ASSOCIATED TRAUMA DURING INTERVENTIONAL PROCEDURES, Heart and vessels, 11(5), 1996, pp. 262-268
To determine the clinical significance of angiographically undetected
left main coronary artery (LMCA) disease, we analyzed data from 47 pat
ients, with a mean age of 58 years, who were examined with intravascul
ar ultrasound (3.5 Fr, 30 MHz). For assessment of atherosclerosis, the
lesion area was calculated from the ultrasound images by the formula,
((total vessel area - lumen area)/total vessel area) X 100 (%). In 37
LMCA segments of patients with significant distal coronary stenosis (
> 50%), the percent intima-media area (the index) was 39 +/- 11% (mean
+/- SD), significantly greater than that of 10 patients without dista
l disease (27 +/- 4%, P < 0.01). Among those with significant coronary
stenosis, the index was markedly greater in patients with multi-vesse
l coronary stenosis (46 +/- 12%, n = 19) than in patients with single-
vessel disease (33 +/- 9%, n = 18; P < 0.01). At three LMCA sites asso
ciated with multi-vessel disease, ultrasound analysis demonstrated dis
ruption of the intima at the site where the guiding catheter for ballo
on angioplasty had been positioned. These results indicate that LMCA d
isease is more prominent in patients with multi-vessel distal coronary
disease than in those with single vessel disease, even in the absence
of angiographic stenosis. We suggest that LMCA trauma can occur where
the guiding catheter for angioplasty is positioned, particularly in p
atients with multi-vessel distal disease.