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Intravascular ultrasound morphology of culprit lesions and clinical demographics in patients with acute coronary syndrome in relation to low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels at onset
Authors:Naoko Takaoka  Kenichi Tsujita  Koichi Kaikita  Seiji Hokimoto  Kenshi Yamanaga  Naohiro Komura  Tadasuke Chitose  Takamichi Ono  Michio Mizobe  Eiji Horio  Koji Sato  Naoki Nakayama  Michiyo Saito  Satomi Iwashita  Sunao Kojima  Shinji Tayama  Seigo Sugiyama  Sunao Nakamura  Hisao Ogawa
Affiliation:1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kumamoto University, 1-1-1 Honjo, Chuo-ku, Kumamoto, 860-8556, Japan
2. Division of Cardiology, New Tokyo Hospital, Matsudo, Japan
Abstract:Despite current standards of care aimed at achieving targets for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), many patients remain at high residual risk of cardiovascular events. We sought to assess the LDL-C-dependent differences in culprit intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) morphologies and clinical characteristics in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Eighty-six consecutive ACS patients whose culprit lesions imaged by preintervention IVUS were divided into two groups based on the fasting LDL-C level on admission: a low-LDL-C group (LDL-C <2.6 mmol/l, n = 45) and a high-LDL-C group (LDL-C ≥2.6 mmol/l, n = 41). Patients with stable angina with LDL-C <2.6 mmol/l (n = 30) were also enrolled as an age- and gender-matched control. The low-LDL-C ACS group was significantly older (72 ± 12 vs 64 ± 14 years, P = 0.007) and more diabetic (47 % vs 15 %, P = 0.001). Importantly, IVUS morphologies were comparable between low- and high-LDL-C ACS groups (all P not significant), whereas culprit plaque was more hypoechoic and less calcified in the low-LDL-C ACS group than in the low-LDL-C stable angina group. Furthermore, compared with the low-LDL-C ACS nondiabetic group, the low-LDL-C ACS diabetic group was more obese, more triglyceride rich (1.3 ± 0.6 vs 0.9 ± 0.4 mmol/l, P = 0.003), and more endothelially injured, but no different for the culprit IVUS morphologies. In multivariate analysis, diabetes was independently associated with a low LDL-C level on admission in patients with ACS. There was no relationship between the LDL-C level at onset and culprit-plaque IVUS morphologies in ACS patients, although culprit plaque in the low-LDL-C ACS group was more vulnerable than in the low-LDL-C stable angina group. In patients with low-LDL-C levels, diabetes with atherogenic dyslipidemia might be the key residual risk.
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