Publication | Closed Access
Anatomical progression of coronary artery disease in humans as seen by prospective, repeated, quantitated coronary angiography. Relation to clinical events and risk factors. The INTACT Study Group.
119
Citations
31
References
1992
Year
In patients with mild to moderate CAD, the angiographic progression is slow (in this study 18.7% of patients and 7% of stenoses per year) but exceeds regression (4.1% of patients and 1.2% of stenoses per year). Progression is predominantly seen in the formation of new coronary stenoses and less in growth of preexisting ones. Most of the stenoses were of a low degree (less than 50%), clinically not manifest including those going into occlusion and leading to myocardial infarction. Progression was influenced by risk factors, especially cigarette smoking (formation of new lesions) and high cholesterol levels (progression of preexisting stenoses).
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