2012
DOI: 10.4261/1305-3825.dir.6127-12.1
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Frequency and extent of coronary atherosclerotic plaques in patients with zero coronary artery calcium score: assessment with computed tomographic angiography

Abstract: ORIGINAL ARTICLE PURPOSE We aimed to evaluate the frequency and extent of coronary atherosclerotic plaques in patients with a coronary artery calcium (CAC) score of zero and establish the demographic characteristics and the cardiovascular risk factors that affect the formation of atheromatous plaques. MATERIALS AND METHODSCoronary computed tomography (CT) angiography was performed in 288 cases with a CAC score of zero. The plaques that were detected using coronary CT angiography were categorized into two group… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…This cutoff value of coronary stenosis had been used and investigated by several studies to define the severity of coronary stenosis in patients who had undergone multislice computed tomographic coronary angiography. 2,12 CT scan protocol and pericardial fat volume quantification CT coronary angiography was performed with a 64-slice scanner (Aquilion™ 64, v. 4.51 ER 010; Toshiba Medical Systems, Tochigi, Japan) with retrospective electrocardiography (ECG) gating. Before multislice CT angiography, a non-contrast CT was acquired to measure the calcium score according to the Agatston method using a sequence scan with a slice thickness of 3 mm.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This cutoff value of coronary stenosis had been used and investigated by several studies to define the severity of coronary stenosis in patients who had undergone multislice computed tomographic coronary angiography. 2,12 CT scan protocol and pericardial fat volume quantification CT coronary angiography was performed with a 64-slice scanner (Aquilion™ 64, v. 4.51 ER 010; Toshiba Medical Systems, Tochigi, Japan) with retrospective electrocardiography (ECG) gating. Before multislice CT angiography, a non-contrast CT was acquired to measure the calcium score according to the Agatston method using a sequence scan with a slice thickness of 3 mm.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The present study only addressed calcified plaques. However, noncalcified plaques are of high relevance in vascular disease as demonstrated by Büyükterzi et al (41) in a study with 288 subjects lacking calcified plaques in the coronary arteries, with 17.4% of their patients showing substantial coronary soft plaques, and 2.1% showing significant stenosis on coronary computed tomography. Besides, cardiovascular diseases reflect a broad spectrum of disease entities, such as cardiac diseases of different origin, and atherosclerosis with its diverse manifestations, while these entities are often linked or have common risk factors (42)(43)(44).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…While his symptoms were markedly atypical, his intermediate cardiac risk and strong family history of early CAD obligated an evaluation for obstructive CAD. Because of its high negative predictive value for the identification of CAD, [5] its ability to reclassify intermediate risk patients into high and low cardiac risk, [3,4] and its ability to identify other, non-cardiac causes of chest pain, a CCTA with CAC was ordered. Another advantage to this approach over stress test imaging is the ability of CCTA to identify subclinical CAD, not identifiable by stress testing.…”
Section: Case Presentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[2] Patients with a zero calcium score are extremely unlikely to have coronary artery disease (CAD). [3,4] However, their risk for obstructive CAD is not zero. [3,4] Cardiac computed tomographic angiography (CCTA), a contrasted scan, is a state of the art diagnostic imaging modality used to evaluate patients with chest pain or other symptoms that may be attributable to CAD.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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