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- Eiji Taguchi, Kazuhiro Nishigami, Shinzo Miyamoto, Tomohiro Sakamoto, and Koichi Nakao.
- Division of Cardiology, Saiseikai Kumamoto Hospital Cardiovascular Center, 5-3-1 Chikami, Minami-ku, Kumamoto, 861-4193, Japan, eiji-taguchi@saiseikaikumamoto.jp.
- Heart Vessels. 2014 Jan 1; 29 (1): 78-82.
AbstractWeak aortic media layers can lead to intimal tear (IT) in patients with overt aortic dissection (AD), and aortic plaque rupture is thought to progress to penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer (PAU) with intramural hematoma (IMH). However, the influences of shear stress and atherosclerosis on IT and PAU have not been fully examined. Ninety-eight patients with overt AD and 30 patients with IMH and PAU admitted to our hospital from 2002 to 2007 were enrolled. The greater curvatures of the aorta, including the anterior and right portions of the ascending aorta and anterior portion of the aortic arch, were defined as sites of high shear stress. The other portions of the aorta were defined as sites of low shear stress based on anatomic and hydrodynamic theories. Aortic calcified points (ACPs) were manually counted on computed tomography slices of the whole aorta every 10 mm from the top of the arch to the abdominal bifurcation point. IT was more often observed at sites of high shear stress in overt AD than in PAU (73.5 vs 20.0 %, P < 0.0001). Significantly more ACPs were present in PAU than in overt AD (18.6 ± 8 vs 13.3 ± 10, P = 0.007). The present study suggests that high shear stress and less severe atherosclerosis could induce the occurrence of an IT, thereafter progressing to overt AD, and that low shear stress and more severe atherosclerosis could proceed to PAU with IMH. These findings may help to identify the entrance-tear site.
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