Title of article :
Value of Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring in Iranian Patients Suspected to Coronary Artery Disease
Author/Authors :
Farhang Zand Parsa, Amir Department of Cardiology - Imam Khomeini Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Gilani Larimi, Naser Department of Cardiology - Imam Khomeini Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Motevali, Marzie Department of Imaging - Imam Khomeini Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Macvand Gholipour, Ali Gheytarieh Clinic - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Rezaei Shahreza, Mostafa Gheytarieh Clinic - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Ranjpoor, Faraz Department of Community Medicine - Yariresan Parsian - LTD, Tehran , Mostafa Dashti, Mohammad School of Medicine - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Coronary artery calcium scoring (CACS) is a reasonable test for patients with the possibility of
atherosclerosis. It can also be used for reclassifying the coronary artery disease (CAD) to the high-risk status
by higher CACS and subsequently modifying the management of the patients.The purpose of this study was
to investigate the association of CACS to the severity of coronary artery disease in the patients who were
scheduled to perform coronary artery angiography (CAG) by tradition. CACS could be a simple, relatively
cost-benefit, and noninvasive method for early screening of patients with obstructive coronary artery disease.
Method: In the present study, CAC scoring was evaluated by non-enhanced Multi-Detector Computed
Tomography (MDCT) in a total 239 patient suffering from coronary artery disease. Of them, 223 patients
were planned to undergo CAG based on clinical examination or other noninvasive diagnostic methods (such
as MPI, ETT, EKG or Echo). Results: Our results showed that 11 of 67 patients with a negative CACS (zero)
had obstructive coronary artery disease derived from the results of CAG. We also found a significant
correlation between high CACS (more than 400) and extensive obstructive CAD, except for the two patients
who had only mild CAD. There was a linear correlation between CACS and the severity of CAD on the basis
of Gensini score and the number of involved arteries (CC=0.507, PV<0.001). Despite fairly high sensitivity
(86.6) of zero CAC among patients with a negative score (86%), zero CACS cannot rule out the existence of
obstructive coronary artery disease. As we found, increased level of CACS (>400) might be a significant
indicative of CAD in referring patients.
Keywords :
CACS , Obstructive CAD , Gensini score , Coronary Artery Angiography (CAG)
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics