Long term consequences of regressed coronary aneurysms after Kawasaki disease: vascular wall morphology and function
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 March 2000
- Vol. 83 (3) , 307-311
- https://doi.org/10.1136/heart.83.3.307
Abstract
OBJECTIVES To investigate the long term consequences of regressed aneurysms after Kawasaki disease, using follow up coronary angiography; to assess the vascular wall morphology at the site of the aneurysms by intravascular ultrasound imaging; and to evaluate the function of the affected vessels using intracoronary infusions of acetylcholine and isosorbide dinitrate. DESIGN 33 patients were studied, 27 with previous Kawasaki disease and six with congenital heart disease. All Kawasaki disease patients were followed for more than 10 years from disease onset. The 33 patients comprised four groups: group 1 included 13 Kawasaki disease patients with a total of 23 sites of regressed large sized (⩾ 4 mm) coronary aneurysms; group 2 included 13 Kawasaki disease patients with 22 sites of regressed small sized (< 4 mm) coronary aneurysms (four patients had sites of both large and small sized aneurysms); group 3 included a further five Kawasaki disease patients with 25 normal coronary angiography sites in the acute stage of Kawasaki disease; and group 4 comprised the six patients with congenital heart disease as controls, with a total of 27 normal coronary angiography sites. During coronary angiography, 15 μg of acetylcholine and 0.5 mg isosorbide dinitrate were infused into the coronary artery. The luminal diameter at the sites was measured using a cine-videodensitometric analyser, to assess the distensibility of the coronary artery wall. RESULTS Coronary angiography in all 22 patients in groups 1 and 2 and in all the patients in group 3 was normal, with no stenoses and no irregularity of the arterial wall. However, the intravascular ultrasound imaging in groups 1 and 2 showed various degrees of the intimal thickening. In groups 1 and 2, there was significantly more vascular constriction with acetylcholine, and poorer dilatation with isosorbide dinitrate than in groups 3 or 4 (each p < 0.05, respectively). There was no difference between group 3 and group 4 in response to either acetylcholine or isosorbide dinitrate, CONCLUSIONS There is evidence of persisting abnormal vascular wall morphology and vascular dysfunction at the site of regressed coronary aneurysms in patients with previous Kawasaki disease. These patients should be counselled to avoid potential risk factors for atherosclerosis, and long term follow up is needed into adult life.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evaluation of pulmonary artery histopathologic findings in congenital heart disease: An in vitro study using intravascular ultrasound imagingJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1995
- Fate of coronary arterial aneurysms in Kawasaki diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1994
- Nitric oxide and nitrovasodilators: Similarities, differences and potential interactionsJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1994
- Vasodilatory response of the coronary arteries after Kawasaki disease: Evaluation by intracoronary injection of isosorbide dinitrateThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1992
- Salicylate treatment in Kawasaki disease: high dose or low dose?European Journal of Pediatrics, 1991
- Paradoxical Vasoconstriction Induced by Acetylcholine in Atherosclerotic Coronary ArteriesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Repeated quantitative angiograms in coronary arterial aneurysm in Kawasaki diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1985
- Fate of coronary aneurysms in Kawasaki disease: Serial coronary angiography and long-term follow-up studyThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1982
- Regression of aneurysms in Kawasaki disease: A pathological studyThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1982
- Coronary aneurysms in infants and young children with acute febrile mucocutaneous lymph node syndromePublished by Elsevier ,1975