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Clinical Trial
. 2002 Aug 13;106(7):804-8.
doi: 10.1161/01.cir.0000025609.13806.31.

Multiple atherosclerotic plaque rupture in acute coronary syndrome: a three-vessel intravascular ultrasound study

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Multiple atherosclerotic plaque rupture in acute coronary syndrome: a three-vessel intravascular ultrasound study

G Rioufol et al. Circulation. .

Retraction in

  • Notice of retraction.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Circulation. 2012 Jun 12;125(23):e1019. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e31825f643c. Circulation. 2012. PMID: 22689939 No abstract available.

Abstract

Background: To test the hypothesis of general atherosclerotic plaque destabilization during acute coronary syndrome (ACS), the present study sought to analyze the 3 coronary arteries by systematic intravascular ultrasound scan (IVUS).

Methods and results: Seventy-two arteries were explored in 24 patients referred for percutaneous coronary intervention after a first ACS with troponin I elevation. Fifty plaque ruptures (mean, 2.08 per patient; range, 0 to 6) were diagnosed by the association of a ruptured capsule with intraplaque cavity. Plaque rupture on the culprit lesion was found in 9 patients (37.5%). At least 1 plaque rupture was found somewhere other than on the culprit lesion in 19 patients (79%). These lesions were in a different artery than the culprit artery in 70.8% and were in both other arteries in 12.5% of these 24 patients. Complete IVUS examination of all 3 coronary axes in patients who had experienced a first ACS revealed that multiple atherosclerotic plaque ruptures were detected by IVUS; these multiple ruptures were present simultaneously with the culprit lesion; they were frequent and located (in three quarters of cases) on the 3 principal coronary trunks; and the multiple plaque ruptures in locations other than on the culprit lesion were less severe, nonstenosing, and less calcified.

Conclusion: Although one single lesion is clinically active at the time of ACS, the syndrome seems nevertheless associated with overall coronary instability.

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