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Coronary arteries in fibromuscular dysplasia. 3-Dimensional coronary CT, case-control study. The ARCARDIA-POL BIS study

Authors :
Marek Kabat
Alexandre Persu
Mariusz Kruk
Cezary Kępka
Ewa Warchoł-Celińska
Magdalena Januszewicz
K Szkamruk
David Adlam
P. Van der Niepen
Andrzej Januszewicz
M Pappaccogli
Piotr Dobrowolski
Aleksander Prejbisz
J Skowronski
Jerzy Pręgowski
Clinical sciences
Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy
Nephrology
Source :
European Heart Journal. 41
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020.

Abstract

Background Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) is a non-atherosclerotic arterial disease characterized by the presence of string-of-beads or focal stenosis. Other FMD-related lesions include arterial dissections, aneurysms, and tortuosity. However, limited data are available on the involvement of coronary arteries in pts diagnosed with “extra-coronary” FMD. Purpose To examine FMD-related coronary artery involvement, coronary artery lesions and coronary tortuosity in patients with a diagnosis of “extra-coronary” FMD. Methods In a case control study we enrolled 103 (age 45.7±13.2, 82 women) consecutive patients with a diagnosis of FMD, in whom atherosclerotic coronary artery disease was excluded on the basis of coronary CTA, and 96 (age 47.3±12.2, 75 women) sex- and age-matched controls without coronary atherosclerosis based on CTA imaging (Siemens Force 2x192 scanner). Detailed analysis of coronary arteries was assessed, with detailed analysis of arterial tortuosity, defined as curves >30 OR >45 OR >90 degrees. Tortuosity Index (TI) was defined as number of curves x artery length (centerline) / vector artery start-end. Each arterial tortuosity evaluation was performed per coronary segment AND per artery. Size (area, length) of coronary arteries was also measured. Results Intravessel symmetry sign and cork-screw sign were more common in arteries of FMD patients than in controls (5.4% vs 1.3%, p30 degrees) (0.777; 95% CI:0.713 to 0.833) or TI (0.794; 95% CI: 0.731 to 0.848), both in distal LAD. For the distal LAD indices, the best sensitivity and specificity values were for ≥4 curves (sens. 74%, spec. 72%) or for a TI >5.6 (sens. 55%, spec. 94%), respectively. These predictive values were confirmed after correction for potential confounders. Interestingly, neither proximal LAD or proximal LCx number of curves or TI were related to FMD. No difference was found in terms of areas of coronary arteries between FMD patients and controls, with the only exception of LM (20.8±6.6 vs 17.9±5.8, p=0.002). Mean coronary artery lenght was significantly different between controls and patients with FMD (respectively LM 8.4±4.2 vs 9.8±4.5, p=0.022; LAD 117.8±28.6 vs 109.1±30.2, p=0.042; LCx 85.2±43.9 vs 62.9±31.4, p Conclusions Distal and not proximal coronary arterial tortuosity is related to FMD. Coronary tortuosity defined as 4 distal LAD curves or a TI >5.6 are highly specific for FMD. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None

Details

ISSN :
15229645 and 0195668X
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e615bef6ea3fbb073aaea3b5cde0725d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjci/ehaa946.1349