Microembolic Events Linked to Sudden Cardiac Death - Plaque erosion is dominant histopathology in clot embolization causing sudden cardiac death - ModernMedicine
Microembolic Events Linked to Sudden Cardiac DeathPlaque erosion is dominant histopathology in clot embolization causing sudden cardiac death


THURSDAY, Nov. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Microemboli and microvascular obstruction are common in acute coronary thrombosis and sudden cardiac death, according to a study in the Dec. 1 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Robert S. Schwartz, M.D., of the Minneapolis Heart Institute and Foundation, and colleagues studied 44 hearts from sudden coronary death patients who died at a mean age of 51 years.

The researchers identified 26 plaque ruptures and 21 erosions, and a mean of 4.5 microemboli per heart. They found that eroded plaques were primarily responsible for microemboli and microvascular obstruction and that the left anterior descending coronary artery was the most common site for microemboli and occluded intramyocardial vessels. They also found that all vessels contained fibrin and platelets.

"Although mechanisms were not evident from this study, the implications are that epicardial atherosclerotic plaque structure and morphology may preferentially predispose to microembolic events," the authors write. "Similarly, iatrogenic plaque disruption occurs with percutaneous coronary intervention of acute coronary syndromes, and microembolic microvascular obstruction is a major clinically recognized cause of angiographic no-reflow."

Abstract
Full Text (subscription or payment may be required)

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

post a comment
Your email address will NOT be published.
appears with your comment
read our privacy policy
Note: does not support HTML
All comments submitted are subject to review and may be delayed before posting. We reserve the right not to post comments. Comments from patients or members of patients' families seeking medical advice will not be posted.
eSamples check closet
eSamples check closet
Practice ToolsPractice Tools
Coding Counselor
Coding Counselor

Simple and accurate ICD-9 code search. Start Here

Patient Education
Patient Education

Print customized patient education handouts. Start Here

Dermatology Diagnosis
Dermatology Diagnosis

Identify skin diseases by age, gender, location. Start Here

AHRQ Clinical Guidelines
AHRQ Clinical Guidelines

Objective findings on medical interventions. Start Here




Click here