Williams M J, Stewart R A
Department of Cardiology, Dunedin Hospital, New Zealand.
Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn. 1994 Oct;33(2):116-9. doi: 10.1002/ccd.1810330206.
It is not known whether general or local factors influence the pathogenesis of coronary ectasia. We analyzed prospectively coronary angiograms from 2,186 consecutive patients with 32 patients (1.5%), identified as having coronary artery ectasia. Sixteen subjects had coronary ectasia in more than one segment of the same or a different artery. In 20 of 72 (28%) ectatic segments there was a proximal, related stenosis. In these cases ectasia was more often saccular than fusiform (16 vs. 4) compared to ectasia without a proximal, related stenosis (21 vs. 31, P = 0.003), and the mean length of the ectatic segment was shorter (8.0 vs. 15.1 mm, P = 0.013). Subjects with ectasia after a stenosis often had other ectatic segments unrelated to stenoses. The high incidence of multisegment involvement suggests that coronary ectasia results from a diffuse abnormality of the vessel wall. In predisposed individuals localized ectasia may follow a stenosis, suggesting poststenotic dilatation.