Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) has emerged as an important
cause of acute coronary syndrome, myocardial infarction, and sudden death,
particularly among young women and individuals with few conventional
atherosclerotic risk factors. Patient-initiated research has spurred increased
awareness of SCAD, and improved diagnostic capabilities and findings from large
case series have led to changes in approaches to initial and long-term
management and increasing evidence that SCAD not only is more common than
previously believed but also must be evaluated and treated differently from
atherosclerotic myocardial infarction. High rates of recurrent SCAD; its
association with female sex, pregnancy, and physical and emotional stress
triggers; and concurrent systemic arteriopathies, particularly fibromuscular
dysplasia, highlight the differences in clinical characteristics of SCAD
compared with atherosclerotic disease. Recent insights into the causes of,
clinical course of, treatment options for, outcomes of, and associated
conditions of SCAD and the many persistent knowledge gaps are presented.
Background-Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD), a noninflammatory disease of medium-size arteries, may lead to stenosis, occlusion, dissection, and/or aneurysm. There has been little progress in understanding the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and outcomes since its first description in 1938. Methods and Results-Clinical features, presenting symptoms, and vascular events are reviewed for the first 447 patients enrolled in a national FMD registry from 9 US sites. Vascular beds were imaged selectively based on clinical presentation and local practice. The majority of patients were female (91%) with a mean age at diagnosis of 51.9 (SD 13.4 years; range, 5-83 years). Hypertension, headache, and pulsatile tinnitus were the most common presenting symptoms of the disease. Self-reported family history of stroke (53.5%), aneurysm (23.5%), and sudden death (19.8%) were common, but FMD in firstor second-degree relatives was reported only in 7.3%. FMD was identified in the renal artery in 294 patients, extracranial carotid arteries in 251 patients, and vertebral arteries in 82 patients. A past or presenting history of vascular events were common: 19.2% of patients had a transient ischemic attack or stroke, 19.7% had experienced arterial dissection(s), and 17% of patients had an aneurysm(s). The most frequent indications for therapy were hypertension, aneurysm, and dissection. Conclusions-In this registry, FMD occurred primarily in middle-aged women, although it presents across the lifespan.Cerebrovascular FMD occurred as frequently as renal FMD. Although a significant proportion of FMD patients may present with a serious vascular event, many present with nonspecific symptoms and a subsequent delay in diagnosis. (Circulation. 2012;125:3182-3190.)
This contribution is being co-published in the following journals: Journal of Hypertension and Vascular Medicine. There will be minor differences in the version published in Vascular Medicine due to copy-editing differences.
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