Vetrovec GW, Cowley MJ, Overton H, Richardson DW. Intracoronary thrombus in syndromes of unstable myocardial ischemia.
Am Heart J 1981;
102:1202-8. [PMID:
7315724 DOI:
10.1016/0002-8703(81)90653-0]
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Abstract
The association of coronary thrombosis and transmural myocardial infarction is well documented. We have recently observed apparent intracoronary thrombi in patients with unstable myocardial ischemia without transmural infarction. To assess the frequency and angiographic characteristics of intracoronary defects consistent with thrombi, we reviewed the angiograms of all patients undergoing catheterization within 1 month of the onset of unstable angina or the intermediate coronary syndrome. Of 129 such patients, eight (6.2%) had nonoccluding, hazy, or nonopacified intracoronary filling defects consistent with thrombus in angiographically well-opacified vessels. All defects were just distal to a significant (80% to 99%) coronary stenosis. In each instance the thrombus-involved vessel supplied a myocardial segment referable to the electrocardiographically defined area of ischemia. Support for the theory that the intracoronary defects were thrombi includes three patients with enlargement of the filling defects, who underwent repeat angiography within 7 days, and two patients with embolization of defect fragments. Furthermore these defects were angiographically similar to poststenotic intraluminal defects seen transiently in some patients after partial intracoronary streptokinase recanalization. In conclusion, we have observed, angiographically, intracoronary filling defects consistent with thrombus in some patients with unstable myocardial ischemia.
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