The widespread activation of neutrophils across the coronary vascular bed in patients with unstable angina, regardless of the location of the culprit stenosis, challenges the concept of a single vulnerable plaque in unstable coronary syndromes.
In unstable angina, CRP may remain elevated for at >/=3 months after the waning of symptoms and is associated with recurrent instability. Elevation of acute-phase reactants in unstable angina could represent a hallmark of subclinical persistent instability or of susceptibility to recurrent instability and, at least in some patients, could be related to chronic Chlamydia pneumoniae infection.
Preprocedural CRP level, an easily measurable marker of acute phase response, is a powerful predictor of both early and late outcome in patients undergoing single vessel PTCA, suggesting that early complications and clinical restenosis are markedly influenced by the preprocedural degree of inflammatory cell activation.
Our data suggest that plaque rupture per se is not the main cause of the acute-phase protein increase in unstable angina and that increased baseline levels of acute-phase proteins are a marker of the hyperresponsiveness of the inflammatory system even to small stimuli. Thus, an enhanced inflammatory response to nonspecific stimuli may be involved in the pathogenesis of unstable angina.
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