Background: Destabilization of the fibrous cap facilitates plaque rupture, thrombus formation, and myocardial infarction. Because systemic stimuli such as lipoproteins infectious agents, and autoantigens, may incite this reaction, one may wonder whether disruption mechanisms are only local or systemic and infarction is caused by an arbitrary plaque event or by a systemic, acute activity of the coronary disease. Methods and Results: Early (3 to 5 days) and late (1 month) peri-infarction coronary angiographic data in 23 patients with first infarction. Were compared with that in 23 similar patients, with angiography performed because of stable angina and repeated after, 1 month before angioplasty. Nonculprit lesion changes at the narrowest point defined progression or regression when exceeding 0.27 mm. In patients with recent infarction we found that 16 had progression, 4 had regression, 1 had both, 2 were steady (values in patients with stable angina being 2 [P<.001], 1 [NS], 0 [NS], and 20 [P<.001]); 27 lesions were infarct related: 17 of the 45 nonculprit lesions progressed and 5 regressed (values in stable angina being 2 [P<.001] and 1 [P<.05] out of 78); minimal diameter reduction of progressing stenoses averaged 0.39 mm: lumen increase of regressing lesions averaged 0.30 mm; 3 patients developed interim rest angina associated with progression of a nonculprit lesion. Conclusions: A greater proportion of subjects and lesions with progression or regression (in infarction versus stable angina) supports the hypothesis that infarction is a hallmark of systemic coronary disease activity. Changes might vary according to the 'maturation' stage of an atheroma, and maximal expression would be at the level of the offending plaque. Shrinkage, thrombolysis, or vascular remodeling would determine the residual plaque morphology.

Evidence of multifocal activity of coronary disease in patients with acute myocardial infarction / M.D. Guazzi, M. Bussotti, L. Grancini, N. De Cesare, M. Guazzi, I.L. Pera, A. Loaldi. - In: CIRCULATION. - ISSN 0009-7322. - 96:4(1997 Aug), pp. 1145-1151.

Evidence of multifocal activity of coronary disease in patients with acute myocardial infarction

M.D. Guazzi;M. Guazzi;
1997

Abstract

Background: Destabilization of the fibrous cap facilitates plaque rupture, thrombus formation, and myocardial infarction. Because systemic stimuli such as lipoproteins infectious agents, and autoantigens, may incite this reaction, one may wonder whether disruption mechanisms are only local or systemic and infarction is caused by an arbitrary plaque event or by a systemic, acute activity of the coronary disease. Methods and Results: Early (3 to 5 days) and late (1 month) peri-infarction coronary angiographic data in 23 patients with first infarction. Were compared with that in 23 similar patients, with angiography performed because of stable angina and repeated after, 1 month before angioplasty. Nonculprit lesion changes at the narrowest point defined progression or regression when exceeding 0.27 mm. In patients with recent infarction we found that 16 had progression, 4 had regression, 1 had both, 2 were steady (values in patients with stable angina being 2 [P<.001], 1 [NS], 0 [NS], and 20 [P<.001]); 27 lesions were infarct related: 17 of the 45 nonculprit lesions progressed and 5 regressed (values in stable angina being 2 [P<.001] and 1 [P<.05] out of 78); minimal diameter reduction of progressing stenoses averaged 0.39 mm: lumen increase of regressing lesions averaged 0.30 mm; 3 patients developed interim rest angina associated with progression of a nonculprit lesion. Conclusions: A greater proportion of subjects and lesions with progression or regression (in infarction versus stable angina) supports the hypothesis that infarction is a hallmark of systemic coronary disease activity. Changes might vary according to the 'maturation' stage of an atheroma, and maximal expression would be at the level of the offending plaque. Shrinkage, thrombolysis, or vascular remodeling would determine the residual plaque morphology.
plaque; angina; myocardial infarction; remodeling
Settore MED/11 - Malattie dell'Apparato Cardiovascolare
ago-1997
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/146923
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