Affiliation:
1. From the Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco.
Abstract
Background
Although coronary atherosclerosis most commonly produces clinical effects as a result of stenosis, aneurysmal disease also occurs. We have found an increased prevalence of ectasia and aneurysmal disease in familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) suggesting a link between plasma lipoproteins and coronary aneurysms.
Methods and Results
In 197 asymptomatic subjects with FH, we examined the prevalence of ectasia and its association with coronary risk factors. An ectatic segment was defined as one with a luminal diameter >1.5 times that of the adjacent normal segment, excluding poststenotic dilation. Among subjects with FH, 15% had ectasia compared with 2.5% of an age- and sex-matched control group of 198 subjects without FH pre- senting for coronary angiography (
P
<.001). These control patients had significantly more severe coronary atherosclerosis than patients with FH. Ectasia was 3 times more common in men than women (
P
<.025). Neither age nor hypertension was predictive. Although in part reflecting the striking sex differential, ectasia was strongly associated with a lower HDL cholesterol level (
P
=.003), a higher LDL/HDL ratio (
P
=.003), and to a lesser extent, a higher LDL cholesterol level (
P
=.07). No association was found with plasma triglycerides or very low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels. Among FH patients, ectasia was strongly associated with an overall index of occlusive atherosclerotic disease, based on quantitative angiography (
P
=.004). Intracoronary ultrasound interrogation of aneurysmal segments revealed circumferential intimal thickening.
Conclusions
Coronary ectasia is more prevalent in patients with FH than in other patients with coronary atherosclerosis and shows a strong inverse association with HDL cholesterol levels. This suggests that disordered lipoprotein metabolism in FH may predispose patients to aneurysmal coronary artery disease.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
79 articles.
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