3.8 Article

Ultrasound-assessed non-culprit and culprit coronary vessels differ by age and gender

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 42-48

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.4330/wjc.v5.i3.42

Keywords

Coronary vessels; Anatomy and histology; Coronary artery; Ultrasonography; Coronary artery disease; Atherosclerosis; Etiology; Age factors

Funding

  1. Swiss Heart Foundation, Bern, Switzerland
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [310000-118468/1]
  3. Kamillo-Eisner Foundation, Hergiswil, Switzerland

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AIM: To investigate age-and gender-related differences in non-culprit versus culprit coronary vessels assessed with virtual histology intravascular ultrasound (VH-IVUS). METHODS: In 390 patients referred for coronary angiography to a single center (Luzerner Kantonsspital, Switzerland) between May 2007 and January 2011, 691 proximal vessel segments in left anterior descending, circumflex and./or right coronary arteries were imaged by VH-IVUS. Plaque burden and plaque composition (fibrous, fibro-fatty, necrotic core and dense calcium volumes) were analyzed in 3 age tertiles, according to gender and separated for vessels containing non-culprit or culprit lesions. To classify as vessel containing a culprit lesion, the patient had to present with an acute coronary syndrome, and the VH-IVUS had to be performed in a vessel segment containing the culprit lesion according to conventional coronary angiography. RESULTS: In non-culprit vessels the plaque burden increased significantly with aging (in men from 37% +/- 12% in the lowest to 46% +/- 10% in the highest age tertile, P < 0.001; in women from 30% +/- 9% to 40% +/- 11%, P < 0.001); men had higher plaque burden than women at any age (P < 0.001 for each of the 3 age tertiles). In culprit vessels of the lowest age tertile, plaque burden was significantly higher than that in nonculprit vessels (in men 48% +/- 6%, P < 0.001 as compared to non-culprit vessels; in women 44% +/- 18%, P = 0.004 as compared to non-culprit vessels). Plaque burden of culprit vessels did not significantly change during aging (plaque burden in men of the highest age tertile 51% +/- 9%, P = 0.523 as compared to lowest age tertile; in women of the highest age tertile 49% +/- 8%, P = 0.449 as compared to lowest age tertile). In men, plaque morphology of culprit vessels became increasingly rupture-prone during aging (increasing percentages of necrotic core and dense calcium), whereas plaque morphology in non-culprit vessels was less rupture-prone and remained constant during aging. In women, necrotic core in non-culprit vessels was very low at young age, but increased during aging resulting in a plaque morphology that was very similar to men. Plaque morphology in culprit vessels of young women and men was similar. CONCLUSION: This study provides evidence that age-and gender-related differences in plaque burden and plaque composition significantly depend on whether the vessel contained a non-culprit or culprit lesion. (C) 2013 Baishideng. All rights reserved.

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