TY - JOUR
T1 - Intravascular ultrasound of coronary arteries in children
T2 - Assessment of the wall morphology and the lumen after Kawasaki disease
AU - Sugimura, Tetsu
AU - Kato, Hirohisa
AU - Inoue, Osamu
AU - Fukuda, Tsuyoshi
AU - Sato, Noboru
AU - Ishii, Masahiro
AU - Takagi, Junichi
AU - Akagi, Teiji
AU - Maeno, Yasuki
AU - Kawano, Teruhiro
AU - Takagishi, Toshiya
AU - Sasaguri, Yasuyuki
PY - 1994/1
Y1 - 1994/1
N2 - Background: The long-term clinical issue in Kawasaki disease (KD) concerns the coronary artery lesion. Two-dimensional echocardiography and coronary angiography are routine examinations to evaluate the coronary lesions; however, these are not adequate to assess the wall morphology of the coronary artery (CA). Intravascular ultrasound imaging (IVUS), a new technology for the evaluation of the coronary artery lumen and wall morphology in vivo, was performed for patients after KD in their long-term follow-up, and we examined the new insights it gave. Methods and Results: IVUS was performed during cardiac catheterization in 20 subjects (10 patients after KD who still had coronary aneurysms or regressed coronary aneurysms, 2 after KD who had no coronary abnormal lesion, and 8 control patients with congenital heart disease and normal CA). We evaluated the wall structure at 10 to 15 sites of the CA in each patient. IVUS was performed with a commercially available ultrasound imaging catheter. Four sites of a CA aneurysm in KD demonstrated a markedly dilated lumen without thickened intima. One site of a CA aneurysm with calcification demonstrated an asymmetrical lumen by a dense echo with acoustic shadows. Twenty-two sites of a regressed CA aneurysm demonstrated a marked symmetrical or asymmetrical thickening of the intima with a dense echo, in which the size of the lumen was similar to that at a site near a regressed aneurysm. The sites of angiographically normal CA revealed normal structures and a thin intima in many instances. Nine of 28 sites in KD with a CA abnormal lesion, particularly near a coronary aneurysm or regressed aneurysm, demonstrated a mild thickening of the intima. All the 10 sites in KD without a CA abnormal lesion and all the 25 sites in patients with congenital heart disease with normal CA demonstrated a smooth intima. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that the site of a regressed coronary aneurysm has a markedly thickened but smooth intima. The sites of angiographically normal CA after KD with or without a coronary lesion demonstrated normal IVUS findings in most instances but in some cases revealed a mild intimal thickening. IVUS is useful to evaluate the CA wall morphology and may contribute to the assessment of long-term CA sequelae and the possible development of arteriosclerotic changes in KD.
AB - Background: The long-term clinical issue in Kawasaki disease (KD) concerns the coronary artery lesion. Two-dimensional echocardiography and coronary angiography are routine examinations to evaluate the coronary lesions; however, these are not adequate to assess the wall morphology of the coronary artery (CA). Intravascular ultrasound imaging (IVUS), a new technology for the evaluation of the coronary artery lumen and wall morphology in vivo, was performed for patients after KD in their long-term follow-up, and we examined the new insights it gave. Methods and Results: IVUS was performed during cardiac catheterization in 20 subjects (10 patients after KD who still had coronary aneurysms or regressed coronary aneurysms, 2 after KD who had no coronary abnormal lesion, and 8 control patients with congenital heart disease and normal CA). We evaluated the wall structure at 10 to 15 sites of the CA in each patient. IVUS was performed with a commercially available ultrasound imaging catheter. Four sites of a CA aneurysm in KD demonstrated a markedly dilated lumen without thickened intima. One site of a CA aneurysm with calcification demonstrated an asymmetrical lumen by a dense echo with acoustic shadows. Twenty-two sites of a regressed CA aneurysm demonstrated a marked symmetrical or asymmetrical thickening of the intima with a dense echo, in which the size of the lumen was similar to that at a site near a regressed aneurysm. The sites of angiographically normal CA revealed normal structures and a thin intima in many instances. Nine of 28 sites in KD with a CA abnormal lesion, particularly near a coronary aneurysm or regressed aneurysm, demonstrated a mild thickening of the intima. All the 10 sites in KD without a CA abnormal lesion and all the 25 sites in patients with congenital heart disease with normal CA demonstrated a smooth intima. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that the site of a regressed coronary aneurysm has a markedly thickened but smooth intima. The sites of angiographically normal CA after KD with or without a coronary lesion demonstrated normal IVUS findings in most instances but in some cases revealed a mild intimal thickening. IVUS is useful to evaluate the CA wall morphology and may contribute to the assessment of long-term CA sequelae and the possible development of arteriosclerotic changes in KD.
KW - Kawasaki disease
KW - arteriosclerosis
KW - coronary aneurysm
KW - coronary angiography
KW - intravascular ultrasound
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U2 - 10.1161/01.CIR.89.1.258
DO - 10.1161/01.CIR.89.1.258
M3 - Article
C2 - 8281655
AN - SCOPUS:0028012435
SN - 0009-7322
VL - 89
SP - 258
EP - 265
JO - Circulation
JF - Circulation
IS - 1
ER -