Author/Editor     Černe, Andreja; Kranjec, Igor
Title     Atherosclerotic burden in coronary and peripheral arteries in patients with first clinical manifestation of coronary artery disease
Type     članek
Source     Heart Vessels
Vol. and No.     Letnik 16
Publication year     2002
Volume     str. 217-26
Language     eng
Abstract     The aim of our study was to assess the atherosclerotic burden in patients with the first symptoms of coronary artery disease (CAD). The study population consisted of 100 consecutive patients (new-onset severe angina or myocardial infaretion) and 70 age- and sex-matched volunteers without symptoms of CAD. Functional and morphologic atherosclerotic markers were sought in carotid, brachial, and femoral arteries of all subjects by means of highresolution ultrasonography while coronary arteriography was performed in the CAD patients only. A total of 347 coronary lesions, 230 (66%) of them obstructive, were discovered in the CAD patients as well as 105 peripheral plaques, of which 26 (25%) were obstructive. The mean percent diameter stenosis of the culprit coronary lesion was 83.8% ± 15.8%, the mean vessel score 1.7 ± 0.8 (range 0-3), the mean stenosis score 19.8 (range 1.5-89.0), and the mean extent score 49.1% (range 10%-65%). Endotheliumdependent vasodilation, as assessed by the brachial flowmediated response (FMR), was reduced by 50% in the CAD patients (P < 0.001 vs controls); it was also observed in carotid and femoral arteries by the cold pressor test. Furthermore, endothelium-independent vasodilation was significantly impaired in all investigated peripheral arteries of the CAD patients (P < 0.05-0.001 vs controls). Intimamedia thickness (IMT) was increased in the carotid arteries of the CAD patients by 43%, in brachial arteries by 20%, and in femoral arteries by 57% (P < 0.01-0.001 vs controls). Decreased FMR or increased carotid IMT were found to be independent risk factors for the CAD, and they correlated with the coronary vessel and extent scores. Peripheral atherosclerosis was more developed in older patients but was similar in patients with different clinical presentation. Hyperlipidemia, a positive family history, and smoking were associated with premature CAD. (Abstract truncated at 2000 characters)
Descriptors     CORONARY ARTERIOSCLEROSIS
CORONARY DISEASE
BRACHIAL ARTERY
CAROTID ARTERIES
FEMORAL ARTERY
AGE FACTORS
SEX FACTORS
CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY
PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASES
PREDICTIVE VALUE OF TESTS
REGRESSION ANALYSIS
RISK FACTORS
CASE-CONTROL STUDIES