Staiger J, Adler C P, Dieckmann H, Barmeyer J
Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol. 1980;3(3):139-43. doi: 10.1007/BF02551975.
Comparisons of the results of angiographic and pathologic-anatomic estimations of the degree of coronary artery stenosis are rare and the findings contradictory. In the present study, postmortem examinations were carried out on 26 hearts with coronary artery disease. Quantitative planimetric measurements of 203 coronary artery cross-sections were performed and compared with the results of postmortem coronary angiograms. Using a score rating scale, a highly significant difference (P < 0.001) between the angiographic and morphologic findings was detected, with the degree of stenosis and underestimated angiographically in 96 of the 203 sections (47%), overestimated in 18 (9%), and correctly estimated in 89 (44%). The tendency to underestimation was equal in all of the coronary arteries (left anterior descending, circumflex, and right coronary arteries); there were no statistically significant differences (P < 0.20, P < 0.30, P < 0.10). The frequency of angiographic underestimation of the degree of morphologic stenosis--especially in critical stenoses of more than 60%)--has important implications in the assessment of whether coronary artery surgery is warranted.