Clinical and pathologic features of obstructive disease in the predominant right and left coronary circulations in man.
- 1 September 1980
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 62 (3) , 485-490
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.62.3.485
Abstract
The clinical features and the location and severity of obstructive coronary artery disease are contrasted in 98 patients with predominant left and 99 patients with predominant right coronary circulations. A significantly higher incidence of ventricular conduction disturbances and a greater incidence and severity of obstructive coronary artery disease (greater than or equal to 70% cross-sectional narrowing in the proximal left anterior descending, circumflex and right coronary arteries and their major branches) distinguish the predominant left from the predominant right coronary circulation. The results suggest an anatomically disadvantaged status for the predominant left compared with the predominant right coronary circulations with respect to ventricular conduction disturbances and to coronary atherogenesis in man.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Short left coronary artery trunk as a risk factor in the development of coronary atherosclerosis. Pathological study.Heart, 1976
- Length of the left main coronary artery: Its relation to the pattern of coronary arterial distributionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1974
- Natural history of severe proximal coronary artery disease as documented by coronary cineangiographyThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1974
- Intraventricular conduction disturbances and coronary artery disease: Clinical, hemodynamic and angiographic studyThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1973
- Coronary Arteriographic Appearances in Patients with Left Bundle-Branch BlockCirculation, 1970
- An electrocardiographic syndrome characterized by absence of Q in leads I, V5, and V6American Heart Journal, 1956
- Coronary arteriosclerosis, coronary thrombosis, and the resulting myocardial changes: An evaluation of their respective clinical pictures including the electrocardiographic records, based on the anatomical findingsAmerican Heart Journal, 1935
- CORONARY THROMBOSISMedicine, 1929
- ArterioskleroseJournal of Molecular Medicine, 1924