TY - JOUR
T1 - Imaging of the vulnerable plaque
T2 - Noninvasive and invasive techniques
AU - Lerakis, Stamatios
AU - Synetos, Andreas
AU - Toutouzas, Konstantinos
AU - Vavuranakis, Manolis
AU - Tsiamis, Eleftherios
AU - Stefanadis, Chistodoulos
PY - 2008/10
Y1 - 2008/10
N2 - In a large proportion of previously asymptomatic individuals, sudden coronary death or acute myocardjal infarction occurs as the first manifestation of coronary atherosclerosis. Imaging of coronary atheromatous plaques has traditionally centered on assessing the degree of luminal stenosis. The angiographic techniques that are routinely used to identify stenotic atherosclerotic lesions are unable to identify high-risk plaques; plaques prone to rupture and cause a cardiovascular event. This is partly due to the fact that the majority of culprit lesions that produce acute cardiovascular syndromes are not severely stenotic, possibly due to significant positive remodeling and reduced protective collateral circulation as well as because the risk of plaque rupture is more closely related to plaque content than plaque size. Recently, the focus of new imaging techniques is to identify the high risk plaques; the "vulnerable plaques." In this review, we will refer to the noninvasive and invasive techniques that can detect the vulnerable plaque.
AB - In a large proportion of previously asymptomatic individuals, sudden coronary death or acute myocardjal infarction occurs as the first manifestation of coronary atherosclerosis. Imaging of coronary atheromatous plaques has traditionally centered on assessing the degree of luminal stenosis. The angiographic techniques that are routinely used to identify stenotic atherosclerotic lesions are unable to identify high-risk plaques; plaques prone to rupture and cause a cardiovascular event. This is partly due to the fact that the majority of culprit lesions that produce acute cardiovascular syndromes are not severely stenotic, possibly due to significant positive remodeling and reduced protective collateral circulation as well as because the risk of plaque rupture is more closely related to plaque content than plaque size. Recently, the focus of new imaging techniques is to identify the high risk plaques; the "vulnerable plaques." In this review, we will refer to the noninvasive and invasive techniques that can detect the vulnerable plaque.
KW - Coronary angiography
KW - Intravascular ultrasound
KW - Invasive
KW - Noninvasive
KW - Vulnerable plaque
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=56049113512&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/MAJ.0b013e31816c7bdf
DO - 10.1097/MAJ.0b013e31816c7bdf
M3 - Article
C2 - 18854678
AN - SCOPUS:56049113512
VL - 336
SP - 342
EP - 348
JO - American Journal of the Medical Sciences
JF - American Journal of the Medical Sciences
SN - 0002-9629
IS - 4
ER -