Pathophysiology and investigation of coronary artery disease

In affluent societies, coronary artery disease causes severe disability and more death than any other disease, including cancer. It manifests as angina, silent ischaemia, unstable angina, myocardial infarction, arrhythmias, heart failure, and sudden death.
Pathophysiology
Coronary artery disease is almost always due to atheromatous narrowing and subsequent occlusion of the vessel. Early atheroma (from the Greek athera (porridge) and oma (lump)) is present from young adulthood onwards. A mature plaque is composed of two constituents, each associated with a particular cell population. The lipid core is mainly released from necrotic “foam cells”—monocyte derived macrophages, which migrate into the intima and ingest lipids. The connective tissue matrix is derived from smooth muscle cells, which migrate from the media into the intima, where they proliferate and change their phenotype to form a fibrous capsule around the lipid core.When a plaque produces a > 50% diameter stenosis (or > 75% reduction in cross sectional area), reduced blood flow through the coronary artery during exertion may lead to angina. Acute coronary events usually arise when thrombus formation follows disruption of a plaque. Intimal injury causes denudation of the thrombogenic matrix or lipid pool and triggers thrombus formation. In acute myocardial infarction, occlusion is more complete than in unstable angina, where arterial occlusion is usually subtotal. Downstream embolism of thrombus may also produce microinfarcts.
Investigations
Patients presenting with chest pain may be identified as having definite or possible angina from their history alone. In the former group, risk factor assessment should be undertaken, both to guide diagnosis and because modification of some associated risk factors can reduce cardiovascular events and mortality. A blood count, biochemical screen, and thyroid function tests may identify extra factors underlying the onset of angina. Initial drug treatment should include aspirin, a blocker, and a nitrate. Antihypertensive and lipid lowering drugs may also be given, in conjunction with advice on lifestyle and risk factor modification.All patients should be referred to a cardiologist to clarify the diagnosis, optimise drug treatment, and assess the need and suitability for revascularisation (which can improve both symptoms and prognosis). Patients should be advised to seek urgent medical help if their symptoms occur at rest or on minimal exertion and if they persist for more than 10 minutes after sublingual nitrate has been taken, as these may herald the onset of an acute coronary syndrome.
- Recent onset of symptoms
- Rapidly progressive symptoms
- Possible aortic stenosis
- Threatened employment Severe symptoms (minimal exertion or nocturnal angina)
- Angina refractory to medical treatment
- Percutaneous coronary intervention
- Positive family history.
- Age.
- Male sex
- Hypercholesterolaemia
- Left ventricular hypertrophy
- Overweight and obesity
- Hypertension
- Sedentary lifestyle
- Excessive alcohol intake
- Smoking
- Diabetes
- Hypertriglyceridaemia
- Microalbuminuria
- Hyperhomocysteinaemia
- Lp(a) lipoprotein
- Fibrinogen
- C reactive protein
- Uric acid
- Renin
Priorities for cardiology referral
Cardiovascular risk factors
Non-modifiable risk factors
Modifiable risk factors
Uncertain risk factors
Non-invasive investigations
Electrocardiography
An abnormal electrocardiogram increases the suspicion of significant coronary disease, but a normal result does not exclude it.
Chest x ray
Patients with angina and no prior history of cardiac disease
usually have a normal chest x ray film.
Exercise electrocardiography
This is the most widely used test in evaluating patients with
suspected angina. It is generally safe (risk ratio of major adverse
events 1 in 2500, and of mortality 1 in 10 000) and provides
diagnostic as well as prognostic information. The average
sensitivity and specificity is 75%. The test is interpreted in terms
of achieved workload, symptoms, and electrocardiographic
response. A 1 mm depression in the horizontal ST segment is
the usual cut-off point for significant ischaemia. Poor exercise
capacity, an abnormal blood pressure response, and profound
ischaemic electrocardiographic changes are associated with a
poor prognosis.
- Target heart rate achieved ( > 85% of maximum predicted heart rate)
- ST segment depression > 1 mm (downsloping or planar depression of greater predictive value than upsloping depression)
- Slow ST recovery to normal ( > 5 minutes)
- Decrease in systolic blood pressure > 20 mm Hg
- Increase in diastolic blood pressure > 15 mm Hg
- Progressive ST segment elevation or depression
- ST segment depression > 3 mm without pain
- Arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia)
- Exercise limited by angina to < 6 minutes of Bruce protocol
- Failure of systolic blood pressure to increase > 10 mm Hg, or fall with evidence of ischaemia
- Widespread marked ST segment depression > 3 mm
- Prolonged recovery time of ST changes ( > 6 minutes)
- Development of ventricular tachycardia
- ST elevation in absence of prior myocardial infarction
- Confirmation of suspected angina
- Evaluation of extent of myocardial ischaemia and prognosis
- Risk stratification after myocardial infarction
- Detection of exercise induced symptoms (such as arrhythmias or syncope)
- Evaluation of outcome of interventions (such as percutaneous coronary interventions or coronary artery bypass surgery)
- Assessment of cardiac transplant
- Rehabilitation and patient motivation Contraindications
- Cardiac failure
- Any feverish illness
- Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- Severe aortic or mitral stenosis
- Uncontrolled hypertension
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Recent myocardial infarction
- Severe tachyarrhythmias
- Dissecting aortic aneurysm
- Left main stem stenosis or equivalent
- Complete heart block (in adults)
- Percutaneous coronary intervention
Main end points for exercise electrocardiography
Features indicative of a strongly positive exercise test
Exercise stress testing
IndicationsStress echocardiography
Stress induced impairment of myocardial contraction is a
sensitive marker of ischaemia and precedes
electrocardiographic changes and angina. Cross sectional
echocardiography can be used to evaluate regional and global
left ventricular impairment during ischaemia, which can be
induced by exercise or an intravenous infusion of drugs that
increase myocardial contraction and heart rate (such as
dobutamine) or dilate coronary arterioles (such as dipyridamole
or adenosine). The test has a higher sensitivity and specificity
than exercise electrocardiography and is useful in patients
whose physical condition limits exercise.
Radionuclide myocardial perfusion imaging.
percutaneous coronary intervention
Thallium-201 or technetium-99m (99mTc-sestamibi,
99mTc-tetrofosmin) is injected intravenously at peak stress, and its
myocardial distribution relates to coronary flow. Images are
acquired with a gamma camera. This test can distinguish
between reversible and irreversible ischaemia (the latter
signifying infarcted tissue). Although it is expensive and
requires specialised equipment, it is useful in patients whose
exercise test is non-diagnostic or whose exercise ability is
limited.
A multigated acquisition (MUGA) scan assesses left
ventricular function and can reveal salvageable myocardium in
patients with chronic coronary artery disease. It can be
performed with either thallium scintigraphy at rest or metabolic
imaging with fluorodeoxyglucose by means of either positron
emission tomography (PET) or single photon emission
computed tomography (SPECT).
reversible anterolateral wall ischaemia,
induced by intravenous dobutamine infusion (white arrows).
Normal rest images are shown by yellow arrows.
percutaneous coronary intervention
Invasive investigations
Coronary angiographyThe only absolute way to evaluate coronary artery disease is by angiography. It is usually performed as part of cardiac catheterisation, which includes left ventricular angiography and haemodynamic measurements, providing a more complete evaluation of an individual’s cardiac status. Cardiac catheterisation is safely performed as a day case procedure.

Angiograms of normal coronary arteries (LAD=left anterior descending artery, DG=diagonal artery, LCx=left circumflex artery, OM=obtuse marginal artery, SAN=sino-atrial node artery, RV=right ventricular branch artery, LV=left ventricular branch artery, PDA=posterior descending artery and percutaneous coronary intervention)
Patients must be fully informed of the purpose of the procedure as well as its risks and limitations. Major complications, though rare in experienced hands, include death (risk ratio 1 in 1400), stroke (1 in 1000), coronary artery dissection (1 in 1000), and arterial access complications (1 in 500). Risks depend on the individual patient, and predictors include age, coronary anatomy (such as severe left main stem disease), impaired left ventricular function, valvar heart disease, the clinical setting, and non-cardiac disease. The commonest complications are transient or minor and include arterial access bleeding and haematoma, pseudoaneurysm, arrhythmias, reactions to the contrast medium, and vagal reactions (during sheath insertion or removal).
Commonly used diagnostic catheters
(from left
to right): right Judkins, left Judkins,
multipurpose, left Amplatz, and pigtail
Before the procedure, patients usually fast and may be given
a sedative. Although a local
anaesthetic is used, arterial access
(femoral, brachial, or radial) may be mildly uncomfortable.
Patients do not usually feel the catheters once they are inside
the arteries. Transient angina may occur during injection of
contrast medium, usually because of a severely diseased artery.
Patients should be warned that, during left ventricular
angiography, the large volume of contrast medium may cause a
transient hot flush and a strange awareness of urinary
incontinence (and can be reassured that this does not actually
happen). Modern contrast agents rarely cause nausea and
vomiting.
Insertion of an arterial sheath with a haemostatic valve
minimises blood loss and allows catheter exchange. Three types
of catheter, which come in a variety of shapes and diameters,
are commonly used. Two have a single hole at the end and are
designed to facilitate controlled engagement of the distal tip
within the coronary artery ostium. Contrast medium is injected
through the lumen of the catheter, and moving x ray images are
obtained and recorded. Other catheters may be used for graft
angiography. The “pigtail” catheter has an end hole and several
side holes and is passed across the aortic valve into the left
ventricle. It allows injection of 30-40 > ml of contrast medium over three to five seconds by a motorised pump, providing
visualisation of left ventricular contraction over two to four
cardiac cycles. Aortic and ventricular pressures are also
recorded during the procedure.

Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)
In contrast to angiography, which gives a two dimensional
luminal silhouette with little information about the vessel wall,
intravascular ultrasound provides a cross sectional, three
dimensional image of the full circumference of the artery. It
allows precise measurement of plaque length and thickness and
minimum lumen diameter, and it may also characterise the
plaque’s composition.
It is often used to clarify ambiguous angiographic findings
and to identify wall dissections or thrombus. It is most useful
during percutaneous coronary intervention, when target lesions
can be assessed before, during, and after the procedure and at
follow up. The procedure can also show that stents which seem
to be well deployed on angiography are, in fact, suboptimally
expanded. Its main limitations are the need for an operator
experienced in its use and its expense; for these reasons it is not
routinely used in many centres.
Doppler flow wire and pressure wire Unlike angiography or intravascular ultrasound, the Doppler flow wire and pressure wire provide information on the physiological importance of a diseased coronary artery. They are usually used when angiography shows a stenosis that is of intermediate severity, or to determine the functional severity of a residual stenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention. Intracoronary adenosine is used to dilate the distal coronary vessels in order to maximise coronary flow. The Doppler flow wire has a transducer at its tip, which is positioned beyond the stenosis to measure peak flow velocity. The pressure wire has a tip micrometer, which records arterial pressures proximal and distal to the stenosis.
percutaneous coronary intervention
percutaneous coronary intervention