Tanaka Atsushi, Shimada Kenei, Yoshida Ken, Jissyo Satoshi, Tanaka Hidemasa, Sakamoto Makoto, Matsuba Kunio, Imanishi Toshio, Akasaka Takashi, Yoshikawa Junichi
Wakayama Medical University, Department of CArdiovascular Medicine, Wakayama, Japan.
Circ J. 2008 Aug;72(8):1276-81. doi: 10.1253/circj.72.1276.
Plaque rupture and secondary thrombus formation play key roles in the onset of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) allows the non-invasive assessment of coronary artery stenosis and plaque properties. In this study, we investigated whether 64-slice MDCT could non-invasively detect a plaque rupture in patients with de novo angina.
The study population comprised 67 patients with de novo angina. All patients underwent contrast-enhanced 64-slice MDCT and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). Patients were divided into a plaque rupture group (n=27) and a non-rupture group (n=40) based on the IVUS. The 64-slice MDCT revealed that the prevalence of an ulcer-like enhancement space (37% vs 5%, p<0.01), a ring-like sign (41% vs 18%, p=0.04), in the plaque rupture group was higher than those in the non-rupture group. Maximum plaque thickness (2.1+/-0.9 mm vs 1.6+/-1.0 mm, p=0.04), outer vessel area (17.6+/-4.9 mm2 vs 13.4+/-5.0 mm2, p<0.01), percentage plaque area (82.3+/-9.1% vs 73.4+/-15.7%, p=0.01), and remodeling index (1.11+/-0.18 vs 1.01+/-0.15, p=0.04) of the plaque rupture group were all significantly larger than those of the non-rupture group.
The 64-slice MDCT can identify differences in lesion morphologies between ruptured plaques and non-ruptured plaques. From our results, the 64-slice MDCT might provide a useful tool for the non-invasive detection of plaque rupture.