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J Am Coll Cardiol, 2005; 46:261-265, doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2005.03.067
(Published online 5 July 2005). © 2005 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation |


* Department of Medicine, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea
Department of Medicine, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, GangNeung, Korea
Cardiovascular Research Foundation, New York, New York.
Manuscript received October 25, 2004; revised manuscript received March 22, 2005, accepted March 29, 2005.
* Reprint requests and correspondence: Dr. Seung-Jung Park, Department of Medicine, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, 388-1 Poongnap-dong, Songpa-gu, Seoul, 138-736, Korea. (Email: sjpark{at}amc.seoul.kr).
| Abstract |
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BACKGROUND: It is clinically important to understand the potential sites of plaque rupture.
METHODS: We performed three-vessel intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) examination in 392 patients; 231 had acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and 161 had stable angina pectoris (SAP). The IVUS detected plaque ruptures in 206 patients: 158 ACS patients and 48 SAP patients. The distance between each coronary plaque rupture segment and the respective coronary ostium was measured with motorized IVUS transducer pullback in all three coronary arteries.
RESULTS: There were a total of 273 plaque ruptures in these 206 patients; 143 in the left anterior descending artery (LAD), 40 in the left circumflex artery (LCX), and 90 in the right coronary artery (RCA). There were 67 plaque ruptures in SAP patients and 206 in ACS patients; there were 197 culprit/target lesion plaque ruptures and 76 non-culprit/non-target lesion plaque ruptures. The LAD plaque ruptures were predominantly located between 10 and 40 mm from the LAD ostium (83%, 119 of 143). The LCX plaque ruptures were evenly distributed in the entire LCX tree. Most RCA plaque ruptures were located in segments between 10 and 40 mm (48%, 43 of 90) and in segments >70 mm from the ostium (32%, 29 of 90).
CONCLUSIONS: Three-vessel IVUS imaging showed that plaque ruptures occurred mainly in proximal segments of the LAD (83% of LAD plaque rupture), the proximal and distal segments of the RCA (48% and 32% of RCA plaque ruptures, respectively), and the entire LCX.
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| Methods |
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IVUS imaging and analysis. The IVUS examinations of all three major epicardial arteries were performed before intervention and after intra-coronary administration of 0.2 mg nitroglycerin with motorized transducer pullback system (0.5 mm/s) and a commercial scanner (Boston Scientific Corp./SCIMED, Natick, Massachusetts) consisting of a rotating 30 MHz transducer within a 3.2-F imaging sheath. After successful pre-interventional imaging and treatment of the culprit/target lesion, pre-intervention IVUS examinations of the remaining non-culprit/non-target arteries and lesions were performed before any additional treatment.
Qualitative and quantitative analyses were performed according to criteria of the Clinical Expert Consensus Document on IVUS (6).
The IVUS criteria for plaque rupture were a plaque containing a cavity that communicated with the lumen with an overlying residual fibrous cap fragment (7). A typical example of plaque rupture is shown in Figure 1. The diagnosis of plaque rupture required independent review and agreement by two of the authors (M-K.H. and Y-H.K.). Confirmation of the initial 279 plaque ruptures by a second reader and repeat evaluation by the first reader resulted in 6 plaque ruptures being excluded from this study.
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Quantitative IVUS analysis was performed with computerized planimetry at the plaque rupture site. Quantitative measurements included external elastic membrane and lumen cross-sectional area (CSA). The intraplaque cavity CSA was measured (8).
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS program (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Illinois). Data are presented as frequencies or mean ± 1 SD. Comparison was performed with unpaired Student t test and chi-square test. A p value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| Results |
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2 plaque ruptures) were observed in 53 patients (40 ACS patients and 13 SAP patients). Thus, a total of 273 plaque ruptures were detected in 247 coronary arteries: 143 ruptures in 128 left anterior descending arteries (LAD), 40 ruptures in 38 left circumflex arteries (LCX), and 90 ruptures in 81 right coronary arteries (RCA) (Fig. 2). In these 247 arteries with at least one plaque rupture, the total length of the coronary artery imaged by IVUS was 83 ± 14 mm in the LAD, 77 ± 12 mm in the LCX, and 101 ± 22 mm in the RCA.
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There were 197 culprit/target lesion plaque ruptures and 76 non-culprit/non-target lesion plaque ruptures (Fig. 4). The clustering of the plaque ruptures was similar in culprit/target lesions compared with non-culprit/non-target lesions. Quantitative IVUS measurements at ruptured plaque sites comparing culprit/target lesions and non-culprit/non-target lesions are shown in Table 2. Thrombi were found in 129 culprit/target (66%) versus 21 non-culprit/non-target lesions (28%) (p < 0.001).
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| Discussion |
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In a recent angiographic study, Wang et al. (1) analyzed 208 consecutive patients with ST-segment elevation MI to determine the location of epicardial thrombosis. These occlusions tended to cluster within the proximal third of each coronary artery. The current study agrees with Wang et al. regarding the proximal distribution of LAD (83%) and RCA (48%) plaque ruptures; however, in the current study, 32% of RCA plaque ruptures were >70 mm from the RCA ostium, and there was no predilection for LCX plaque rupture to develop at any one specific location. The reasons for the differences between the current IVUS study and the previous angiographic study are unclear, but the study populations were different, and the number of LCX plaque ruptures or acute occlusions was small in both studies. The angiographic study enrolled patients with acute vessel occlusion regardless of the underlying plaque pathology (plaque rupture vs. erosion), whereas we included any plaque rupture regardless of clinical consequences. Therefore, especially in the RCA, which has few branches, the initial event may be more distal and the angiographic occlusion more proximal, following retrograde thrombus propagation.
In addition, the current study extends the findings of the angiographic study of Wang et al. (1) by also studying patients with stable angina as well as by studying secondary (non-culprit and non-target lesion) plaque ruptures. While a minority of SAP target lesions contained plaque ruptures, the locations were similar to those of ACS patients, confirming the importance of plaque rupture clustering. Multi-focal plaque instability has been reported in previous studies (5,7,8). The current study showed that proximal segments of the LAD and RCA were also the most common sites of secondary plaque ruptures.
There are several possible explanations for the distribution of plaque ruptures. First, plaque rupture distribution seems to follow the distribution of coronary atherosclerosis as assessed with IVUS (911) as well as the larger arterial dimensions present in the proximal LAD and LCX and throughout the RCA. Second, within segments of higher plaque burden, plaque ruptures seem to occur at sites of increased stress (i.e., 50% occurred near a branch point).
Study limitations. This study was a single center IVUS study. Further studies will be needed to validate the current study in a larger number of patients in multiple centers. Compared with angiography, IVUS imaging is limited by distal lesion location, small vessel size, and confounding IVUS morphology (thrombus may obscure the ruptures). An IVUS cannot identify the age of a ruptured plaque cavity. The distal RCA was routinely imaged, but the distal LCX (because of tortuosity) and LAD (because of vessel tapering) were less frequently imaged. The technique of saline flushing was not routinely used in this study; it was performed to identify 41 (15%) subtle plaque ruptures. Volumetric analysis was not performed.
Conclusions. Three-vessel IVUS imaging in 392 patients (206 with plaque ruptures) showed that plaque ruptures occurred mainly in the proximal segments of the LAD, the proximal and distal segments of the RCA, and the entire LCX. This data may be useful in devising strategies for vulnerable (rupture-prone) plaque detection.
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