Blood Vessel Spasms Linked To Heart Attacks

Spasms at sites of coronary artery narrowing could be used a predictor for heart attacks, paving the way for early detection.

AsianScientist (Sep. 10, 2015) – Researchers at Kumamoto University in Japan have found that patients with coronary spasms have a higher risk of experiencing future heart attacks. In particular, when a spasm occurs at the site of atherosclerotic coronary artery narrowing, the risk is higher.

Angina is caused by the narrowing of the blood vessels that carry blood to the heart, and vasospastic angina patients account for about 40 percent of all angina patients. The incidence and progression of the disease can be reduced through appropriate drug treatment with relatively good prognosis. However, where abnormal narrowing (or stenosis) of the coronary arteries has developed alongside vasospastic angina, cases of heart attack increase.

A detailed study on the positioning of coronary spasm relative to coronary artery stenosis had not been performed, until now. This study was published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Dr. Kaikita Koichi’s team examined in detail the positional relationship between coronary spasms and arteriosclerosis, and compared the case data of patients with spasm occurring at sites of coronary atherosclerotic stenosis to those whose spasm occurred at another site.

Data was gathered from 1,760 cardiology patients of Kumamoto University Hospital between 1991 to 2010 who experienced chest pain and underwent cardiac catheterization at rest.

Case data was divided into three groups, one in which the coronary spasm occurred at a site of stenosis of the coronary artery, one where the spasm occurred at another site, and another group that had spasms but no stenosis.

Out of the 1,760 cases, coronary spasm occurred 873 times and constriction of a coronary artery was observed 358 times.

Both coronary spasm and coronary atherosclerotic stenosis occurred in a total of 233 cases and there was a tendency for these patients to have a lower rate of diabetes than in stenosis only cases. Furthermore, patients who had coronary spasm without stenosis were found to be older than patients who had neither stenosis nor coronary spasm.

The group with coronary spasm occurring at the site of stenosis was found to have the highest risk of experiencing heart attack within five years when compared to the group with a coronary spasm without coronary atherosclerotic stenosis, and the group with a coronary spasm at a site different from the coronary atherosclerotic stenosis.

“Our research shows that coronary spasm occurring at the site of coronary atherosclerotic stenosis is a predictor for acute coronary syndrome,” said Kaikita. “In other words, these people have a high risk for heart attack in the relatively near future.”

Checking for the occurrence of a coronary artery spasm at sites of coronary artery stenosis helps predict a person’s risk for a future heart attack and may be useful for beginning sufficient preventative therapy.

The article can be found at: Masanobu et al. (2015) Acetylcholine-Provoked Coronary Spasm at Site of Significant Organic Stenosis Predicts Poor Prognosis in Patients With Coronary Vasospastic Angina.

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Source: Kumamoto University.
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