Identification of patients and plaques vulnerable to future coronary events with near-infrared spectroscopy intravascular ultrasound imaging: a prospective, cohort study

Autor: Waksman, Ron, Di Mario, Carlo, Torguson, Rebecca, Ali, Ziad A, Singh, Varinder, Skinner, William H, Artis, Andre K, Cate, Tim Ten, Powers, Eric, Kim, Christopher, Regar, Evelyn, Wong, S Chiu, Lewis, Stephen, Wykrzykowska, Joanna, Dube, Sandeep, Kazziha, Samer, van der Ent, Martin, Shah, Priti, Craig, Paige E, Zou, Quan, Kolm, Paul, Brewer, H Bryan, Garcia-Garcia, Hector M, Samady, Habib, Tobis, Jonathan, Zainea, Mark, Leimbach, Wayne, Lee, Daniel, Lalonde, Thomas, Skinner, William, Villa, Augusto, Liberman, Henry, Younis, George, de Silva, Ranil, Diaz, Miguel, Tami, Luis, Hodgson, John, Raveendran, Ganesh, Goswami, Nilesh, Arias, Jose, Lovitz, Lawrence, Carida II, Robert, Potluri, Srinivasa, Prati, Francesco, Erglis, Andrejs, Pop, Andrei, McEntegart, Margaret, Hudec, Martin, Rangasetty, Umamahesh, Newby, David
Zdroj: The Lancet; November 2019, Vol. 394 Issue: 10209 p1629-1637, 9p
Abstrakt: Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) intravascular ultrasound imaging can detect lipid-rich plaques (LRPs). LRPs are associated with acute coronary syndromes or myocardial infarction, which can result in revascularisation or cardiac death. In this study, we aimed to establish the relationship between LRPs detected by NIRS-intravascular ultrasound imaging at unstented sites and subsequent coronary events from new culprit lesions.
Databáze: Supplemental Index