Histologic characteristics of tissue excised during directional coronary atherectomy in stable and unstable angina pectoris — Javier Escaned (1993) | RDL Network
Histologic characteristics of tissue excised during directional coronary atherectomy in stable and unstable angina pectoris
The American Journal of Cardiology 71(16): 1442-1447
Article 1993 English
Authors
JE
Javier Escaned
RS
Robert Jan van Suylen
DM
Donald C. MacLeod
Abstract
1 min read
Unstable angina is an acute coronary syndrome associated with substantial short- and medium-term morbidity and mortality.1 The understanding of the pathogenesis of this syndrome has been based largely on postmortem studies of coronary arteries2 and supported by indirect evidence of coronary thrombosis in relation to the syndrome.3–5 Because directional coronary atherectomy is unique in extracting intact atheromatous tissue during coronary recanalization, it may facilitate the study of the processes taking place in the vessel in different coronary syndromes. In the present study the histopathologic characteristics of atherectomy samples retrieved in 93 patients with stable or unstable angina pectoris were compared and related to different clinical variables.
Pim J. de Feyter, Patrick W. Serruys, Marcel van den Brand, Kulasekaram Balakumaran, Bahamshir Mochtar, Alan Soward, Alf E. R. Arnold, Paul G. Hugenholtz
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